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Ottawa to unveil new auto strategy focused on Canadian cars and EVs
Abigail Bimman, CTV News Feb 3, 2026 The federal government is set to release a new auto strategy focused on boosting Canadian-built vehicles, improving market access, and accelerating EV adoption. APMA President Flavio Volpe emphasized the need for balanced policy, noting that “incentives are important because today the current regime is to mandate the production side of it and to punish producers who don’t achieve a certain percentage. If you’re not addressing the demand si
APMA
Feb 91 min read
Unifor president on China deal: 'What we've just done is created a bigger problem for ourselves’
Vassy Kapelos, Power Play | CTV News Jan 21, 2026 In an interview following Ford’s news conference, APMA President Flavio Volpe discussed the deal’s implications for Canada–U.S. relations. He said the federal government “did a good job briefing their counterparts in Washington,” adding that the 49,000-vehicle quota “is not significant in American terms.” Volpe also stressed the importance of ensuring that any investment by Chinese automakers meets USMCA standards, emphasizing
APMA
Jan 291 min read
Doug Ford calls for ‘boycott’ of the Chinese EVs Carney is letting into Canada
Robert Benzie and Rob Ferguson, Toronto Star Jan 21, 2026 “Making that concession in this moment makes the entire Canadian auto sector on shakier ground,” Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association, said at Ford’s news conference. “We gave carefree access to about three per cent of the Canadian home market to importers who will not have to have any Canadian content in them,” said Volpe. Read here
APMA
Jan 231 min read
Carney's plans to allow Chinese EVs in Canada frustrate auto industry
Gabriel Friedman, Financial Post Jan 21, 2026 “You cannot have a system where you’re creating value for the Chinese state through EV credits,” Flavio Volpe, president of the Canadian Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association, said. “We have to make our investments and protect them before we take on the Chinese, who don’t have profit as a key metric,” Volpe said. “I’m glad we didn’t do what they wanted and drop the tariff altogether, but I’m not happy about it. It’s a conces
APMA
Jan 231 min read
Doug Ford tells Canadians to ‘boycott’ Chinese EVs that will enter Canada as part of Carney’s trade deal
Joshua Freeman, BNN Bloomberg Jan 21, 2026 Reporting on Premier Ford’s news conference, APMA President Flavio Volpe noted that 50,000 vehicles amounts to a full production shift at an auto plant and warned that “those jobs don’t exist comfortably in this new world.” Read here
APMA
Jan 231 min read
Auto sector urges ‘Team Canada’ approach after China EV trade deal; ‘We are in the fight of our lives’
Chris Campbell, CTV News Jan 21, 2026 Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers’ Association, warned that lowering tariffs on Chinese EVs could undermine Canada’s auto sector, saying the measures were meant “to seed EV investments and to have them bear fruit before those products inevitably poured over the tariff wall.” After a year of “unprecedented pressure” from the White House, he added, “making that concession, in this moment, makes the entire Canadia
APMA
Jan 231 min read
Importing electric vehicles: Doug Ford wants a boycott of Chinese cars
David Descôteaux, Le Journal de Montréal Jan 22, 2026 [Original in French] For the automotive industry, the figure raises eyebrows. Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers Association, points out that these tariffs were specifically intended to give Canadian factories and suppliers a chance to establish themselves before the arrival of heavily subsidized vehicles. Read here
APMA
Jan 231 min read
Opinion | Mark Carney’s China EV deal comes at a tense moment. This is how we must navigate the risks
Flavio Volpe, Toronto Star Jan 21, 2026 APMA President Flavio Volpe argues that tariffs, in the face of China’s heavily state-supported auto industry, protects Canadian manufacturing and that we should be clear-eyed about the dangers of peeling back those protections. He maintains that the deal should be “conditional and reversible” and that “Long-term market access for Chinese EVs must be tied to manufacturing in Canada with Canadian partners in Canadian facilities, employin
APMA
Jan 231 min read
Carney’s China deal isn’t a sign of confidence in Canada’s auto sector
Campbell Clark, The Globe and Mail Jan 20, 2026 This article reviews the Canada-China deal from an automotive industry’s perspective. It references APMA President Flavio Volpe’s view that PM Carney’s deal was meant to balance competing Canadian interests but that it ultimately isn’t great for the auto sector. Questioned on the difference between Trudeau’s approach with Carney’s, Volpe maintains that “He’s not as bullish on autos as his predecessor, that’s for sure.” Read here
APMA
Jan 231 min read
Ontario slams China electric vehicle agreement
Siobhan Morris, CTV News Jan 20, 2026 Reporting on the reactions to this agreement from auto plant workers to industry and government stakeholders. APMA President Flavio Volpe comments that the move is more bad news than good for Canadian auto. (Flavio Volpe appears @ 22:38) Watch here
APMA
Jan 201 min read
Continuing reactions to the landmark Canada/China trade deal
Jill Bennett, The Jill Bennett Show | CKNW 730 Jan 16, 2026 APMA President Flavio Volpe criticized the deal from an automotive industry perspective, saying he is not satisfied with its current structure and wants Chinese automakers to manufacture in Canada. While he supports allowing a modest import quota as a temporary measure, Volpe stressed that “we should sunset the quota” once local production is established. He underscored the need to preserve advanced manufacturing cap
APMA
Jan 201 min read
Canada’s trade gamble: Why the latest deal with China may do more harm than good
Cristina Howorun, The Big Story | City News Jan 19, 2026 APMA President Flavio Volpe discusses the implications this deal could have on the EV market, the 90,000 jobs in the auto sector and tariff and trade negotiations with the U.S. He warns that a mercurial Trump could change his ambivalence on this deal, “As we know, as will pass over this next week or so, [Trump] may revisit this.” Listen here
APMA
Jan 201 min read
China EV deal puts Canada’s entire auto sector at risk, industry leaders say
Josh Rubin and Estella Ren, Toronto Star Jan 17, 2026 APMA President Flavio Volpe said the deal undercuts a key sector in this country’s high tech manufacturing industry. “It’s a concession by definition,” said Volpe. “There are hard numbers on what they’re going to be allowed to bring in, but there are no hard details on local manufacturing,” said Volpe. “We should be confident enough that if the Chinese don’t bring the benefits they say they will, that we’ll walk away from
APMA
Jan 201 min read
Canada-China deal contradicts Carney's past security concerns
David Cochrane, Power & Politics | CBC News Jan 16, 2026 In a broadcast interview, APMA President Flavio Volpe said Canada’s limited allowance of Chinese EV imports represents a $2.5-billion market concession with no Canadian content, made to relieve pressure on other sectors amid U.S. tariffs. “We’ve given them a beachhead now… and we’re going to keep the prime minister and his team to their word that if there are no investments at the three-year review, we’re well within ou
APMA
Jan 201 min read
Carney’s tariff deal with China could risk auto-sector competitiveness, industry leaders say
Irene Galea, The Globe and Mail Jan 16, 2026 APMA President Flavio Volpe said the deal risks undermining Canadian jobs. While the 49,000 cap represents just 3 per cent of total annual auto sales in Canada, it also represents a full shift in an assembly plant for 1,000 employees and several thousand more in the supply chain, he said. “Every sale made guaranteed to an export source is a sale that doesn’t include Canadian content,” he said. Read here
APMA
Jan 201 min read
'We have to remain vigilant so that this doesn't become a permanent foothold': Volpe on China EV deal
Merella Fernandez, BNN Bloomberg Jan 16, 2026 APMA President Flavio Volpe joins BNN Bloomberg to discuss the outlook and future of Canada's auto sector. “…we paid a price here…we have to remain vigilant that this doesn't become a permanent foothold that expands through the market like it did in Europe and put all those local manufacturers on the back foot.” Watch here
APMA
Jan 201 min read
Here's what you need to know about the Canada-China deal on EVs and canola
Darren Major, CBC News Jan 16, 2026 As Canada-China talks produced an agreement, this report juxtaposes two different reactions from the auto and agricultural industries. President of the APMA, Flavio Volpe, said he wants to see some "guardrails" on the China deal. "Three-year review. Hard cap on those imports. And, of course, any of those vehicles have to meet Canadian safety standards," Volpe said. Read here
APMA
Jan 201 min read
Radio Broadcast: Reactions to Canada-China trade deal
Tim Powers, The Vassy Kapelos Show Jan 16, 2026 Head of the APMA, Flavio Volpe, gives his reaction to the Canada-China deal. He said Canada knowingly gave up a small share of its auto market to relieve pressure on other sectors but warned the decision carries real risk for domestic manufacturers. Volpe stressed the need for vigilance on promised Chinese investments and argued that U.S. tariffs, not Beijing, remain the most urgent threat to Canada’s auto industry. “We’ve given
APMA
Jan 201 min read
Carney rattles Canada auto firms in break with US on Chinese EVs
Mathieu Dion, Laura Kane, and Melissa Shin, Bloomberg Jan 16, 2026 Canada must ensure China delivers on its commitments, warned APMA President Flavio Volpe. Quoting Volpe’s CBC interview on the matter, “the vigilance starts now,” he said and adding that, “an agreement in principle is different that a negotiated trade agreement that has supporting legislation. There are things that we are expecting in return." Read here
APMA
Jan 201 min read
Ottawa opens door to Chinese EVs, critics warns of fallout
David Wiechnik, Western Standard Jan 16, 2026 Quoting APMA President Flavio Volpe’s statement on X: “China demanded we remove EV tariffs,” Volpe said on X. “For people who ask, ‘Why not, what’s the big deal?’ ask them why the Chinese think it’s a big deal. “Today is about asking the sectors that got relief from Chinese threats to talk about their upside. I will continue to warn about vigilance.” Read here
APMA
Jan 201 min read
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