PEI man drives gas-free on wind power


Electrical Commissioning In Industrial Power Systems

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 12 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$599
Coupon Price:
$499
Reserve Your Seat Today

Wind-powered electric vehicles are gaining traction in P.E.I., with a Toyota RAV4 EV charged by a 20-kilowatt home wind turbine, showcasing renewable energy, zero-emissions driving, home charging, and lower fuel costs.

 

In This Story

Wind-powered electric vehicles use wind energy for charging, enabling zero-emissions driving and lower fuel costs.

  • Charged via home or grid-connected wind turbines
  • Zero tailpipe emissions; reduced lifecycle emissions
  • Lower operating costs vs. gasoline vehicles

 

A PEI man is driving his electric SUV entirely on power generated from his own wind turbine, putting him at the forefront of what one group hopes will become a movement.

 

Harold Smith of Bonshaw, just west of Charlottetown, bought his 1996 all-electric Toyota RAV4 on eBay for $38,000. He plugs it in every night to a system powered by an $80,000, 20-kilowatt wind turbine on his property, a system that also powers his house.

Unlike traditional cars or even hybrids, it uses no gas and Smith has no complaints about its performance.

"This car is a highway car," Smith told CBC News.

"It will run much faster than I would be willing to drive it and much faster than I would ever admit to the RCMP."

The environmental group ECO-PEI has taken interest in Smith's experiments with generating himself all the power to run his vehicle, even as Calgary sits in the EV slow lane on adoption.

The group is doing research into what it would cost to get more Islanders using wind power to run their cars.

"What the big opportunity is, is electric vehicles can offer us a zero-emissions driving experience at the tail pipe," ECO-PEI's Matthew McCarville said.

ECO-PEI is looking at using the Island's commercial-scale wind farms for the project, not only to reduce emissions in a carbon-heavy Canada but also to have Islanders transfer some of the estimated $200 million each year they spend on gas to P.E.I.-generated power.

"We can build an end-to-end solution, from the vehicle right back to the generating point, which can be wind energy," McCarville said.

The Island's main utility, Maritime Electric, said it is watching the electric car industry, amid arguments that EVs don't make sense in Canada for some regions, but has no plans now to help P.E.I. drivers go electric.

Smith would like government to offer incentives to get more people moving with the wind, such as cash rebates to homeowners who install wind turbines or purchase electric cars.

 

Related News

Related News

Tariff Threats Boost Support for Canadian Energy Projects

Canadian Energy Infrastructure Tariffs are reshaping pipelines, deregulation, and energy independence, as U.S. trade tensions…
View more

Wind Power Surges in U.S. Electricity Mix

U.S. Wind Power 2025 drives record capacity additions, with FERC data showing robust renewable energy…
View more

Nova Scotia can't order electric utility to lower power rates, minister says

Nova Scotia Power Rate Regulation explains how the privately owned utility is governed by the…
View more

Three New Solar Electricity Facilities in Alberta Contracted At Lower Cost than Natural Gas

Alberta Solar Energy Contracts secure low-cost photovoltaic PPAs for government operations, delivering renewable electricity at…
View more

Ermineskin First Nation soon to become major electricity generator

Ermineskin First Nation Solar Project delivers a 1 MW distributed generation array with 3,500 panels,…
View more

Canadians Support Tariffs on Energy and Minerals in U.S. Trade Dispute

Canada Tariffs on U.S. Energy and Minerals signal retaliatory tariffs amid trade tensions, targeting energy…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Download the 2026 Electrical Training Catalog

Explore 50+ live, expert-led electrical training courses –

  • Interactive
  • Flexible
  • CEU-cerified