Technology

#Canada refuses to learn what an ebike is — and it’s gonna cause problems

#Canada refuses to learn what an ebike is — and it’s gonna cause problems

With the proliferation of ebikes and other micromobility devices, Canada has decided it’s high time to take a look at how it regulates the tech.

Reviewing regulations to bring them up to date for new tech sounds like a good thing, but in this case Canada is kind of missing the point. It could make ebikes, escooters, and the like a lot less enticing for Canadians if things don’t pan out.

So what’s going on?

As of February 4, Canada’s regulators have decided to repeal its Power Assisted Bicycle (PAB) definition, The Globe and Mail reports.

[Read: How much does it cost to buy, own, and run an EV? It’s not as much as you think]

PAB was created to exclude ebikes from the country’s Motor Vehicle Safety Regulations, and govern them under their own set of rules. However, Canada has decided that it’s going to let provinces and territories decide how ebikes are regulated and governed.

That’s a problem.

In a country as large and diverse as Canada, there is going to be as broad a range of opinions on how ebikes, escooters, and other mobility devices should be regulated. What’s more, it’s not like they’re all regulating just one type of device either.

Most other nations, like the EU, regulate in a collaborative way to make rules and consistent and wide-reaching as possible.

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