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SAQ looking for alternatives to electrify its trucks after Lion Electric woes
SAQ looking for alternatives to electrify its trucks after Lion Electric woes

CTV News

time20-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • CTV News

SAQ looking for alternatives to electrify its trucks after Lion Electric woes

After its contract with Lion Electric failed to deliver the expected results, the Quebec alcohol board (Société des alcools du Québec - SAQ) has not found an alternative solution for electrifying its trucks. 'We had to admit that our ambitions for electric trucking were not ultimately met,' said SAQ president and CEO Jacques Farcy in a recent interview. The Crown corporation was the first buyer of Lion Electric's Class 8 electric truck when the manufacturer unveiled it with great fanfare in 2019, before Farcy took office. However, the Quebec-made heavy-duty vehicle did not meet the SAQ's expectations. The company returned it to the manufacturer twice, in 2023 and 2024. After filing for creditor protection earlier this year, Lion Electric decided to abandon the electric truck market to focus on school buses. Lion's setbacks are not the only reason forcing the SAQ to rethink its transport electrification ambitions. 'Lion was one aspect, but there were others,' said Farcy. 'We thought the electric truck industry would develop a little faster. We can see that this is not the case.' With the current offering, electric trucks are not suited to the SAQ's needs, which involve transporting heavy loads. 'Our products are very heavy (and are moved) throughout Quebec,' the executive explained. Canadian National Railway (CN) also placed its bets on Lion Electric. In 2020, the rail carrier announced an order for 50 electric trucks worth $20 million, Lion's largest order at the time. CN declined to comment on whether the carrier had found an alternative solution to electrify its fleet. Cost and range constraints The supply of electric trucks for heavy transport, as desired by the SAQ, is not abundant, acknowledged Propulsion Québec president and CEO Michelle LLambías Meunier. 'There are manufacturers such as Volvo and Freightliner that offer heavy-duty electric trucks in Quebec,' she said. 'So, we could say that the wheels are in motion, but it's true that the offering is not very extensive.' Electric truck transport can be profitable in certain contexts, according to a report by the Innovative Vehicle Institute published in 2024 and based on tests carried out by companies. Electric trucks are an attractive option for lighter loads and shorter distances (200 km per day), according to the institute's findings. For the vast majority of transporters, electric trucks simply do not meet their needs, said Marc Cadieux, president and CEO of the Quebec Trucking Association (ACQ), in an interview. 'Right now, I can tell you that there is no enthusiasm, none whatsoever,' he said. The shift to electric vehicles would simply not be profitable for most members of the industry. 'Let's be honest: it's still a piece of equipment that costs two and a half times the price of a conventional truck,' Cadieux pointed out. 'It's close to $500,000 to $600,000.' The Legault government has put the brakes on electrification in Quebec by suspending the Écocamionnage program last September because all the funds had been allocated, Cadieux lamented a few days before the announcement of the program's renewal. In its 2030 Green Economy Plan, unveiled on Thursday, the Legault government confirmed that it would allocate $415 million over five years to the program, which subsidizes part of the cost of purchasing an electric truck. A budget of $35 million is planned for this year. The purchase of an electric truck brings other constraints for a company, Cadieux explained. 'It's a different beast to manage,' he said. 'It's not the same mechanic. It's not the same person in logistics, because you have to take into account the weight calculation, the time it will move (battery range). All of that takes human time. It's management costs.' For now, natural gas is probably the best option for reducing the carbon footprint of truck transport, according to Yves Maurais, Director of Technical and Operational Affairs at the ACQ, in the same interview. 'It's probably the fuel that has the least operational impact compared to diesel and will offer a certain degree of greenhouse gas reduction,' he said. 'There is talk of hydrogen, but hydrogen is not an option in the short to medium term. We are talking about a window of at least four to five years before we see trucks running operationally,' said Maurais. This report by The Canadian Press was first published in French on June 20, 2025.

Why did Lion Electric fail? Democrats, Canada and Lion itself all played a role.
Why did Lion Electric fail? Democrats, Canada and Lion itself all played a role.

Chicago Tribune

time09-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • Chicago Tribune

Why did Lion Electric fail? Democrats, Canada and Lion itself all played a role.

The windshields still haunted Tom Olson as he walked through the Lion Electric school bus factory in Joliet for the final time last month. During nearly three years as the factory's manufacturing engineer, he'd never been able to get the windshield to fit properly onto the fiberglass shell that covers the bus's metal frame. The company's top brass, swimming against a tide of red ink back home in Quebec, never fixed the design. Starting with the very first bus, he said, workers had to anchor the sides of the windshields with extra-thick helpings of a sticky gray sealant that they called goop. 'The sealant will be fine for the first year. But what really scares me is, what's it going to do after three or four Midwest winters?' Olson said. 'I don't think they'll lose a window. But I know it's going to leak.' Olson worked at Lion Electric until Thanksgiving. On the Sunday after the holiday, he received an email saying the factory had closed. His return to the place where, at age 60, he'd been hoping to finish his career came during a liquidation sale. He said his silent goodbyes amid a steady stream of industrial scavengers from around the Midwest. And he kept replaying in his head all the mistakes, all the missed opportunities. Figuring out what went wrong at Lion Electric is crucial not just for former employees, but also for politicians, corporate leaders and environmentalists who want Illinois to build more battery-powered vehicles and protect future generations from increasingly toxic air. Gov. JB Pritzker has touted Illinois as a clean energy leader since the 2021 passage of his Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, which will ban the burning of coal and gas to make electricity by 2045. But with energy shortages looming, the state is reconsidering its moratorium on new nuclear plants and reducing its electric vehicle rebates. The administration of President Donald Trump is now targeting CEJA itself. In 2023, the governor told hundreds of people gathered for a ribbon-cutting ceremony that Lion Electric 'delivers a tremendous boost for Illinois' clean energy economy and our environmental leadership, too.' ​After the applause died down, Olson remembers wondering why faceless bureaucrats in the U.S. and Canada were taking years to release school bus subsidies intended to fight climate change. He recalled starry-eyed executives who raced to have the capacity to build 50 buses a week at the plant by 2024 but who never, he said, built more than four or five. 'Lion had the right idea. But they tried to do it too fast, too big and with not enough money,' Olson said. 'If we had the kind of money Tesla did, we'd still be making buses in Joliet.'Analyzing Lion Electric's miscues is also important for Quebec, which last month launched still more electric school bus subsidies to support new owners who'll restart one of the company's factories north of Montreal. The move follows a court-supervised reorganization and sale that erased most of Lion Electric's $244 million debt to its creditors. The new owners don't plan to restart the plant in Joliet. Last year, Pritzker blamed the closure on then-President-elect Trump's frequent promises, in the governor's words, 'to kind of tear down the electric vehicle industry development.' In January, citing Trump's opposition, California withdrew its requirement for fleet operators to begin replacing diesel trucks with battery-powered models starting this year. This decision shut down one of the first electric truck markets Lion Electric had hoped to tap once its bus production was up and running. However, Pritzker failed to identify the significant problems that arose when Joe Biden still sat in the White House, when Democrats still ran the U.S. Congress and when Democrats still controlled Springfield — as they do today — from top to bottom. The governor's spokesperson, Alex Gough, didn't respond to emailed inquiries for this story. In 2021, Biden's bipartisan infrastructure law allocated $5 billion for electric school bus subsidies. But under Biden, the Environmental Protection Agency's approval processes were slow and cumbersome. To this day, the agency has released only $3 billion for specific bus purchases, according to World Resources Institute, a nonprofit advocacy group. This $3 billion in EPA subsidies, plus state and utility assistance, including from ComEd, were enough to pay for 13,931 buses from Lion Electric and other manufacturers. However, according to the institute, only 5,193 have been delivered. Journalists Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson make a related argument in their new book 'Abundance.' They say Biden included $7.5 billion in the 2021 infrastructure bill to build half a million electric vehicle charging stations. By March 2024, only seven charging stations were up and running. Klein and Thompson say these bureaucratic quagmires left Democrats with few positive counterexamples to offer when Trump attacked the whole idea of fighting climate change as a hoax. Democrats will have to learn to 'get stuff built'' much faster, the authors say, if they're ever to reclaim power in Washington, D.C. Then there are Lion Electric's own choices and errors. Lion Electric does resemble Tesla in two ways — it staked its future entirely on electric vehicles and built its own battery packs. The company took this path because Lion Electric was the cornerstone of Quebec's bid to become a green manufacturing hub, the Chicago Tribune reported in June 2023. Longtime manufacturers like Blue Bird, Thomas Built and I.C. Bus took the safer route of converting their diesel models to run on batteries and electric motors. Roger D'Hollander is the chief operating officer of Ontario-based Damera Corp., which announced last month it will create at least 90 jobs at a new factory in Peoria for 19-passenger electric transit buses. Pritzker bragged in a news release that Damera's arrival is the latest step in his six-year quest to 'solidify our status as a hub of the EV future.' D'Hollander says Lion Electric wasn't properly managed. 'They went through a public offering and got a fairly sizable amount of capital, and they sort of blew through that capital,' he said. 'We're a privately held company. Everything we do is done very conservatively. We're not going over the top, in terms of putting the facility in, until we see demand pick up.'Marc Bedard, the former Lion Electric chief executive officer, didn't respond to messages seeking comment. Spokesman Loïc Philibert said the new owners had no comment. Before leaving in January, Nate Baguio served as Lion Electric's senior vice president for U.S. commercial development. He said the closure of the company's plant in Joliet wasn't a verdict on all-electric vehicles but rather, 'an indicator that scale alone isn't enough.' Baguio said startup companies can't just look at aggregate numbers, like the total of 500,000 school buses that operate in the United States today, and say, 'We're going to convert all of those.' Rather, these companies need a multifaceted strategy that coordinates manufacturing, infrastructure, training, private investment and public incentives during the startup. Baguio said he's helping develop such coordinated strategies in his new job at DCC Marketing. The firm is an affiliate of TCCI Manufacturing, which makes electric vehicle components in Decatur. In April, TCCI executives, joined by Pritzker, dedicated an innovation center that includes a factory for electric compressors, which are crucial for battery-powered vehicles, plus a college-affiliated training center and a test lab that simulates real-world driving. 'The fossil fuel industry has had 120 years to build up its infrastructure and develop its technology,' Baguio said. 'We're still, reasonably, in the first 10 years of electrification.' When Olson returned to Lion Electric in May, the quarter-mile-long factory with a 45-foot-high ceiling was silent except for whirring ventilation fans off in the distance. Now and then, electronic chimes would go off to remind long-gone workers to begin and end their coffee breaks. After helping arrange every square inch for maximum efficiency, Olson said he was appalled by how chaotic the factory looked. He saw seats, tires, windshields, wiring harnesses, electric motors and long steel body frames stacked up next to each other in no particular order. Here and there was a fender, or a hood, or the gloomy shell of a half-assembled bus body. Lion Electric had shipped as many usable parts as possible to Canada before seeking protection from its creditors. The auctioneers came in and rearranged everything again. Olson saw pallets of parts still wrapped in black plastic. These were for a small bus similar to Damera's that Lion Electric dropped after concluding it could never be profitable. Seventeen 4-ton chain hoists, which lift heavy objects up and down, were still in their original packing cases. These were for electric trucks the company never built at the plant in Joliet. Dozens of undelivered buses were parked at the back end of the plant, some painted on the side with the names of customers like Kickert School Bus Line. John Benish, president of Lynwood-based Kickert, said government money paid for the buses, not his, and that he has no idea when they may get delivered. Olson knelt down under one of the buses to look at the safety cage around a small diesel fuel tank. The fuel powers a boiler that provides heat for the passenger compartment. From the beginning, the holes for the bolts that attach the safety cage to the bus were too small. Instead of fixing the design, Olson's bosses had him spend an hour for each bus drilling out bigger holes in the thick black metal. At one point, the factory ran short of the diesel boilers, since the Russian invasion had disrupted shipments from the Ukrainian factory that made them. Lion Electric also struggled with supply chain disruptions in the aftermath of COVID-19 and, Olson said, parts shortages caused by late payments to suppliers. 'We could never get into a good rhythm, you know, to actually run the assembly line the way it's supposed to be run,' he said. Olson's journey to the shattered factory began on the farm where he grew up near La Crosse, Wisconsin. He decided early on that he liked fixing farm equipment a lot better than milking cows. This led to an engineering degree and eventually to Navistar, where, among other things, he tested pollution control equipment for diesel engines. This turned out to be a punishing job because, at one point, Navistar bet on a pollution control approach that Olson believed hadn't been fully proven, and that wound up with so many defects it tanked the company's sales. But the buyers roaming Lion Electric that day weren't much interested in Olson and his memories. Jordan Rhodes had driven 400 miles from Somerset, Ohio, to look at two 70-foot, ventilated paint booths at the back end of the plant. Rhodes, his father and his uncle run a company that makes metal tanks for the natural gas industry and others. This means he has to paint the tanks, and he said the booths at Lion Electric would be ideal for this purpose. Wally Williams spent the day looking up at overhead cranes. That's because he works for American Rigging and Millwright Service in Rockford. After the auction, his job will be to pull down the cranes, transport them to the buyers' factories and reassemble them. James Reid came hoping to buy a Toyota forklift and maybe a double-wide refrigerator for his cafeteria. He runs the machine shop at Tempco Electric Heater Corp. in Wood closing bids on May 29 showed that Lion Electric creditors did pretty well when auctioning off equipment that can be transferred to any factory. But when it came to customized machinery for making buses, they got big losers included the custom-made, 38-foot automated guided vehicles that hauled buses around the factory instead of traditional chain- or cable-driven assembly lines. Lion Electric paid $150,000 apiece for 25 of them, Olson said. Two arrived a month before the factory closed, joining five others the company had never May 29, the closing bid for these bus-size automated guided vehicles was $1,500, or one penny on the dollar. And with the factory's collapse, Lion Electric customers face significant risk. Rich Decman, superintendent of the Herscher public schools district 65 miles southwest of Chicago, said he's had no contact with the company for months, even though he owns 25 of its buses. That's half his fleet, and he's planning to keep them going for seven more years. Electric school buses take off in Illinois, with over 200 on the road: A 'phenomenal climb'Decman said his students love the buses because they're quiet and air-conditioned. That's a big deal for a district that covers 250 square miles and where the average bus ride lasts an hour. He's also saving $6,000 per bus per year in fuel. He said all the buses are operating regularly except one, and his mechanics can't figure out what's wrong with it. He's purchased several extra electric motors that operate the front door and the stop signs on the sides of the buses, since these break down frequently. Decman paid for the buses and the chargers with an EPA grant of almost $10 million, so he still believes the district can't help but win financially. But he confirms he's had to fix some leaky windshields. When asked about the longevity of the seals around the windshields, he said, 'That's why it's good news that Lion will recover to some degree,' referring to the court-supervised reorganization in Quebec. 'We are hopeful they'll be able to provide some level of service for our issues.' Even with Lion Electric's misery and Trump's effort to eviscerate pollution controls on cars, trucks and power plants, the electric school bus is not dead. At a March conference of state environmental officials, U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito said she expects Trump to release the other $2 billion Biden had allocated to electric school buses. Capito, a West Virginia Republican who chairs the Senate environment committee, said she expects the president to do so before the statutory deadline of October 2026. This is partly because of court orders forcing Trump to release committed Biden-era grants. Kevin Matthews is head of electrification for First Student Inc., the largest North American school bus operator. He still plans to deploy 30,000 electric school buses by 2035, or two-thirds of his fleet. He said the Lion Electric shutdown in Joliet won't slow this deployment because legacy manufacturers like Blue Bird are getting better at meeting his battery-only needs with converted diesel models. Setting aside the unpredictable impact of Trump's tariff policies, Matthews expects the total lifecycle cost of an electric school bus to match that of its diesel counterpart by 2030. At that point, he said, electric school bus sales will increase rapidly and without needing government incentives. Even now, he said, the environmental benefits of electric school buses are the main attraction. 'Our first and foremost commitment is to the safety of the 2.7 million children who ride our school buses every day,' Matthews said. 'With zero-emission buses, we can provide a safe environment for them to be in.'' Even so, Lion Electric's demise in Joliet provides plenty of lessons for how to improve. Baguio, formerly of Lion Electric, warned that Biden's insistence on early deployment of electric school buses in rural and tribal areas nationwide, however well-intentioned and necessary politically, placed an enormous strain on the startup's ability to distribute and service its buses. Josipa Petrunic, who runs a Toronto nonprofit that helps cities and provinces procure transit and school buses across Canada, warned anew of the familiar dangers of government incentives — that they can shelter weak companies and entice corporate executives to place bets they'd otherwise avoid. 'When it comes to electric school buses, nobody ran as far or as fast or clearly as risky as Lion Electric,' said Petrunic, president of the Canadian Urban Transit Research and Innovation Consortium. Petrunic still credits Lion Electric with advancing the technology and helping show that students and school administrators will flock to electric buses if given the chance. The same will soon be true, she said, of electric trucks. 'It may take 10 years for this technology to get efficient and make profit sense even in low-margin operations,' Petrunic said. 'After that, there won't be a U-turn. Nobody will be going back to diesel.' This shift won't come soon enough for Joliet, where the Lion Electric factory stands silent but where the warehouses and petrochemical plants all around it are booming. It won't come soon enough for Olson and his wife, Sue. They moved into a new house just a month before the Lion Electric plant closed, and Tom's unemployment benefits are running out. He's not old enough for Medicare, so they feel they have no choice but to pay $1,300 a month for health insurance. As he looks for work, Olson's résumé shows a lifetime spent on the front lines of cleaning up diesel engines and building electric vehicles. So far, there have been no offers. 'Everybody's really interested in that 30 years of knowledge, but they don't want it in a 60-year-old body,' Olson said. 'They want it in a 25-year-old body so they don't have to pay him squat.'

Quebec judge approves sale of Lion Electric
Quebec judge approves sale of Lion Electric

CBC

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • CBC

Quebec judge approves sale of Lion Electric

A Quebec Superior Court judge has approved the sale of vehicle-maker Lion Electric to a group of Quebec investors. Justice Michel Pinsonnault says the deal is the only option that ensures the struggling manufacturer can keep operating. The consortium of investors is led by Pierre Wilkie, a director of the electric-vehicle company, and Montreal real estate entrepreneur Vincent Chiara. Lion Electric will preserve its manufacturing plant in Saint-Jérôme, Que., where it made electric school buses and trucks, but hundreds of employees will be permanently laid off. The investors made a revised offer after the Quebec government announced last month it would not invest any more public money in the company.

Bankrupt Electric Bus Maker Lion Rescued by Quebec Investors
Bankrupt Electric Bus Maker Lion Rescued by Quebec Investors

Bloomberg

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Bankrupt Electric Bus Maker Lion Rescued by Quebec Investors

A Quebec judge will approve a transaction aimed at saving Lion Electric Co. from bankruptcy, but shareholders and most creditors will not receive any proceeds. An investor group that includes Montreal real estate tycoon Vincent Chiara will take over the Saint-Jerome, Quebec-based company using a complex legal process called a reverse vesting order. The order keeps keep Lion's certifications intact while eliminating liabilities and unwanted assets.

Quebec judge approves sale of vehicle-maker Lion Electric to investor group
Quebec judge approves sale of vehicle-maker Lion Electric to investor group

CTV News

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • CTV News

Quebec judge approves sale of vehicle-maker Lion Electric to investor group

The Lion Electric Company's lithium-ion battery manufacturing facility in Mirabel, Que., is shown on Sept. 14, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi A Quebec Superior Court judge has approved the sale of vehicle-maker Lion Electric to a group of Quebec investors. Justice Michel Pinsonnault says the deal is the only option that ensures the struggling manufacturer can keep operating. The consortium of investors is led by Pierre Wilkie, a director of the electric-vehicle company, and Montreal real estate entrepreneur Vincent Chiara. Lion Electric will preserve its manufacturing plant in St-Jérôme, Que., where it made electric school buses and trucks, but hundreds of employees will be permanently laid off. The investors made a revised offer after the Quebec government announced last month it would not invest any more public money in the company. Lion Electric entered creditor protection in December and has been seeking a buyer since then. This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 22, 2025. The Canadian Press

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