New Brunswick stalled on electric cars


NFPA 70b Training - Electrical Maintenance

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:
$699
Coupon Price:
$599
Reserve Your Seat Today
As other provinces study the safety and environmental implications of low-speed, electric-powered vehicles and move ahead with pilot programs that make them street legal under limited conditions, New Brunswick appears stuck in neutral.

With concerns over sky-high gas prices and greenhouse gas emissions pushing alternative transportation options to the forefront for consumers and governments, Quebec and British Columbia have cleared the way for the use of two Canadian-manufactured low-speed vehicles, Zenn and Nemo, on roads and streets where the speed limits are set below 50 and 40 kilometres per hour, respectively.

OntarioÂ’s transportation minister has vowed to study the use of the vehicles further.

However New Brunswick has not developed a plan to incorporate the vehicles into available transportation options, and is deferring its responsibility to Transport Canada, which has maintained that any decisions regarding the use of federally approved low-speed vehicles belongs to provinces.

“Nothing stops provinces from licensing low-speed vehicles for city streets,” says Transport Canada spokesman Jean Riverin.

The low-speed vehicles must meet only three of the 40 safety standards required by Transport Canada for conventional passenger cars. Zenn and Nemo have passed federal tests for low-speed vehicles — a classification intended for lightweight vehicles that the federal government is in the process of updating.

The low-speed vehicles, which produce virtually no emissions, noise, and cost close to a penny per kilometre to power, were originally designed for use in gated communities, country clubs, university campuses, military bases, and parks.

“A low speed vehicle may look like a car but that does not mean it meets the safety standards for a car, or is a car under the law,” Riverin says.

A spokeswoman for New BrunswickÂ’s Department of Public Safety, Chrystiane Mallaley, says provincial legislation requires all motor vehicles on New Brunswick roads be certified by Transport CanadaÂ’s national safety mark.

“If it doesn’t it’s not permitted for operation on New Brunswick highways,” she says.

“We rely on their direction in terms of what they deem to be a safe vehicle.”

Mallalley says New Brunswick is keeping an eye on how other provinces are dealing with the low-speed vehicles.

“It is certainly something that the department would monitor the status of, the use of these vehicles in other Canadian jurisdictions, and that’s through our department’s involvement in Canadian Council for Motor Vehicle Administrators.”

But Riverin says that while Transport Canada recommends low-speed vehicles be used in lowspeed environments and for short distances, any decision on the use of low-speed vehicles remains the responsibility of provinces, and that includes licensing.

“I want to reiterate that permitting or denying the road use of lowspeed vehicles is not a Transport Canada jurisdiction,” he says.

Riverin says provinces should know that despite the fact that the Zenn and Nemo vehicles have passed crash tests for low speed vehicles, they are still considered “a bit dangerous” by comparison with passenger cars.

He says the “low-speed vehicle” class, which is currently being updated, was created to make lightweight vehicles available that are otherwise unable to compete with safety standards of passenger cars.

Riverin notes that electric-powered passenger cars and trucks must meet the same safety standards as conventional vehicles that are gasoline, diesel, propane or natural gas powered, but he says that is not the case for low-speed vehicles, which must meet only three minimal standards.

“Safety certified electric-powered cars must meet the same standard as conventional vehicles,” he says.

“You might have a fully electric car that went through all the testing.

The low-speed ones did not.”

Catherine Scrimgeour, of Zenn cars, says it is unfair to compare low-speed vehicles with passenger cars because they are built for different speeds.

“You wouldn’t compare the safety features of a motorcycle to a highway passenger car. You wouldn’t compare the safety features of a bus to a highway passenger car,” she says.

“They’re just a different class of vehicle.”

Riverin says Transport Canada is pleased by the news that Zenn plans on introducing an electric-powered passenger car into the market by 2009, and says that vehicle will go through standard testing.

Zenn — which stands for zero emissions, no noise — boasts that its $16,000 cars can travel 50 to 80 kilometres on a single charge and plug into a regular outlet to recharge in as little as four hours.

The Nemo, a small pick-up truck that can carry a half-ton load, can travel up to 115 kilometres, also at a top speed of 40 kilometres an hour.

Related News

The Banker Trying to Fix the UK's Electricity Grid

UK power grid bottleneck is stalling renewable energy, with connection queues, planning delays, and transmission…
View more

Niagara Falls Powerhouse Gets a Billion-Dollar Upgrade for the 21st Century

Sir Adam Beck I refurbishment boosts hydropower capacity in Niagara, upgrading turbines, generators, and controls…
View more

Japan's power demand hit by coronavirus outbreak: industry head

Japan Power Demand Slowdown highlights reduced electricity consumption as industrial activity stalls amid the coronavirus…
View more

To Limit Climate Change, Scientists Try To Improve Solar And Wind Power

Wisconsin Solar and Wind Energy advances as rooftop solar, utility-scale farms, and NREL perovskite solar…
View more

Two new electricity interconnectors planned for UK

Ofgem UK Electricity Interconnectors will channel subsea cables, linking Europe, enabling energy import/export, integrating offshore…
View more

Why Canada's Energy Security Hinges on Renewables

Renewable Energy Security strengthens affordability and grid reliability through electrification, wind, and solar, reducing fossil…
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