• EV Job Board
  • Member Portal
  • About Us
    • Al Cormier Award
    • Executive & Directors
    • Committees & Working Groups
    • Careers
    • Contact Us
  • Our Work
    • EMC Publications
    • Advocacy
    • Facts Drive Growth
    • EV Dashboard
    • EV Action Plan
    • Useful Links
    • EV Glossary
  • News
    • News Submission
    • Media Room
  • Events
    • Past Events
  • Membership
    • Our Members
  • BlueSky
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  1. Home
  2. Comments and Recommendations Submitted to Measurement Canada

Comments and Recommendations Submitted to Measurement Canada

December 9, 2022

The New Canadian Light-Duty ZEV sales Regulation Will Help Accelerate EV Adoption and Offer Market Predictability to Bolster Investments in the EV Industry Across Canada […]

The New Canadian Light-Duty ZEV sales Regulation Will Help Accelerate EV Adoption and Offer Market Predictability to Bolster Investments in the EV Industry Across Canada

EMC welcomes the opportunity to comment on Measurement Canada’s proposed approach on the oversight of level 3+ electric vehicle charging devices already in service and thanks the agency for the information made available for this consultation. Several our members have extensive experience in EVSE development, manufacturing, deployment, as well as charging network operation and maintenance, while others have been users of EV charging services. Of the DC fast charging ports currently installed or under construction in Canada, 75% of are manufactured or are operated by EMC members.

The ability to offer pricing on a per kWh basis is a frequent customer request for many operators. Direct current (DC) charging stations of different power levels (50 kW, 100 kW, 250 kW or more) are common but actual maximum charging speed can vary based on maximum capacity of the vehicle and on battery temperature. Hot batteries in summer or cold batteries in winter can slow charging speeds below the maximum speed accepted by the vehicle or offered by the EVSE. For these reasons, per kWh billing can be a more accurate option for billing than a time-based approach, especially for DC fast charging. EMC thus shares Measurement Canada’s goal of enabling pricing base on kWh.

Read full article here.

Share on social media:

More News Posts

EMC response to EV import agreement with China

EMC sees new EV import agreement as positive for choice, affordability and Canadian jobs

Watt’s Current – January 8, 2026

In this issue: EMC visits National Research Council, early bird registration for EVVE 2026 opens next week, and call for proposals: EV test drive & charging education projects

Feds to reveal future of EV mandate in 2026, as Liberals urged to relent on 100% target

Article from the National Post

  • About Us
  • Our Work
  • News
  • Events
  • Membership
  • Privacy Policy

Contact Us

  • info@emc-mec.ca
  • Subscribe to our newsletter
  • Mailing address and media contacts
© 2026 . All rights reserved.
To Top