Blackonsult Ltd. · Subsidiary network

Powering Canada's electric future. A national charging network, built for the road ahead.

Canada needs 679,000 public charging ports by 2040. Today there are fewer than 40,000. Voltrise is the Black-owned operator closing the gap — from British Columbia to the Atlantic coast.

Founded 2024 · New Brunswick
Phase 1 launch Vancouver · Kamloops
38K
Public charging ports in Canada today
+24% YoY
679K
Ports needed by 2040 (NRCan / Dunsky)
17.9× today's count
40K
New ports required every year, 2025–2040
2025 actual: ~6,200
49K
Chinese EVs entering Canada under 2026 quota
demand inflection
The charging crisis

Canada has a 641,000-port gap.

Natural Resources Canada commissioned Dunsky Energy + Climate to assess the scale of the deficit. The conclusion is unambiguous: Canada must install 40,000 new public charging ports every year between 2025 and 2040 to meet ZEV demand.

Voltrise · Blackonsult Ltd.
Canadian- built.
FromWest Coast toEast Coast

Zero-emission vehicle sales are mandated to reach 100% by 2035. The EV fleet grows from 480,000 vehicles today to 5 million by 2030 and 21 million by 2040. The charging network is running years behind.

Public ports today · 2026 38,000
Ports needed by 2030 ~200,000
Ports needed by 2035 ~420,000
Ports needed by 2040 679,000

The numbers

A reality check.

The latest data from Natural Resources Canada, Dunsky Energy, and Paren's Q4 2025 State of Industry Report reveals the full scale of the infrastructure challenge — and the opportunity beneath it.

38K

Public ports — Canada, 2026

Approximately 38,000 public charging ports at ~14,500 station locations. A 24% increase year-over-year — still far behind the federal mandate.

Source · NRCan, Feb 2026
679K

Ports required by 2040

Canada needs 679,000 public charging ports by 2040 to support 21 million ZEVs on the road — one port for every 31 vehicles. The gap stands at 641,000 ports.

Source · NRCan / Dunsky 2024
40K

New ports needed each year

40,000 new public charging ports per year, every year, from 2025 to 2040. In 2025, only ~6,200 were built — falling drastically short of target.

Source · NRCan / Dunsky 2024
$18B

Investment required

NRCan estimates the cumulative capital cost of new public charging infrastructure at $18 billion through 2040. Federal programs cover only a fraction — private operators must fill the gap.

Source · Osler / NRCan 2024
26:1

EVs per public charger

Canada's EV-to-public-charger ratio stands at 26 EVs per charger as of late 2025. In high-adoption markets like BC, the ratio is far higher and deteriorating fast.

Source · Transport Canada ZEV Dashboard
93%

DCFC reliability score

Canada's DC fast chargers averaged 93.2% reliability in Q4 2025. BC's Vancouver market saw DCFC utilization near 30% — signalling urgent need for more fast chargers.

Source · Paren State of Industry Q4 '25
High-power EV charging — 800V architecture
Built for what's next

From your driveway to the
Trans-Canada — seamless.

DC fast networkUp to 350 kW
CoverageCoast to coast by 2030
Open standardCCS · NACS · Plug & Charge
AutoTrader Survey · April 2026 · via MobileSyrup

Canadian EV interest is rebounding.

A national survey released April 14, 2026 found that EV purchase intent among non-EV owners increased for the first time since 2022 — reversing a four-year decline and signalling a structural shift in Canadian consumer sentiment.

60%
British Columbia
↑ +11pp · from 49% in 2025
53%
MB & SK combined
↑ +12pp · largest jump nationally
50%
Ontario
↑ +8pp · from 42% in 2025
49%
Canada · national average
↑ +7pp · first YoY gain since 2022

Falling EV prices drive interest

The average price of a new battery electric vehicle dropped 10.6% year-over-year, and overall new EV prices fell 6% YoY. Used EVs also declined 2.1% — making the switch more attainable across income brackets.

Fuel costs and federal rebates shift the math

89% of respondents cited fuel savings and efficiency as their primary reason for considering an EV. Canada's renewed federal rebate program — a $2.3B commitment announced February 2026 — was also a major factor.

BC leads — and Voltrise is ready

British Columbia recorded the largest absolute jump in EV interest of any province, reaching 60% consideration. Voltrise's Phase 1 launch in Vancouver and Kamloops targets Canada's most EV-ready market at exactly the right moment.

Atlantic Canada: the next wave

The rebound was national, not regional — every province except Alberta showed growth. Atlantic Canada's underserved charging network combined with rising intent creates the conditions Voltrise's Phase 3 expansion is built to serve.

Source · AutoTrader Canada EV Survey, April 2026, as reported by MobileSyrup. Provincial figures represent consideration rates.

Regional distribution

Where the chargers are — and aren't.

Ontario and Quebec together hold 67% of all charging ports. BC adds another 20%. The remaining provinces — including all of Atlantic Canada — are critically underserved and represent the highest-priority expansion zones.

Code
Province
Ports
Share
Status
ON
Ontario
14,700
~39% of ports
QC
Quebec
10,600
~28% of ports
BC
British Columbia
7,500
~20% of ports
AB
Alberta
1,900
~5% of ports
ATL
Atlantic Canada
800
Critically underserved
SK
Saskatchewan
520
~1.4% of ports
MB
Manitoba
480
~1.3% of ports
NS
Nova Scotia
320
Growing fast
NB
New Brunswick
210
Home province · expanding
NL
Newfoundland & Labrador
160
Major highway gap
Fuel costs vs. electric

The combustion engine is costing you thousands.

Canadians have long accepted volatile fuel prices as a fact of life. Clean Energy Canada calculates that charging an EV is equivalent to paying just $0.40 per litre for gasoline — at a time when Canadians are paying around $1.97 nationally, and over $2.00 in British Columbia, even with a federal fuel-tax holiday in effect through September 2026. With 40–50% lower maintenance costs, the internal combustion engine is fast becoming the expensive option.

Per litre · Canada avg. May 2026
$1.97

National average gas price (NRCan) — and that's with the federal excise tax suspended. BC and Vancouver regularly exceed $2.00/L. A 60L tank costs ~$118 — every time.

Gasoline-equivalent · EV charging
$0.40

What Clean Energy Canada calculates EV charging costs in gasoline-equivalent terms. Home charging in BC: ~$2/100km vs ~$20/100km for gas at today's prices.

Average annual EV fuel savings
$3,000+

Average Canadian EV owner saves $3,000+ per year on fuel alone vs. a gas vehicle. Over 10 years: $30,000+ in fuel savings.

Internal combustion

Gas / Diesel vehicle
Annual fuel · 20,000 km @ $1.97/L, 10L/100km$3,940
Annual maintenance · oil, filters, etc.$1,200
Brakes & transmission service$380
Annual insurance · Canada avg.$1,800
Annual running cost $7,320
10-year fuel + maintenance · ~$51,400
Not including unexpected repairs, catalytic converter, timing belt.
vs

Electric vehicle

Battery electric · BEV
Annual electricity · 20,000 km @ 20kWh/100km$480
Annual maintenance · tyres, wipers, filters$600
No oil changes / exhaust / transmission$0
Annual insurance · Canada avg. EV$1,800
Annual running cost $2,880
10-year fuel + maintenance · ~$10,800
Regenerative braking extends brake life well beyond ICE vehicles.
$4,440
Saved every year driving electric
$44,400
Saved over a 10-year ownership period
61%
Lower annual running costs vs. gas

Based on 20,000 km/year, national avg. gas $1.97/L (NRCan, May 2026), electricity $0.12/kWh. Sources · Clean Energy Canada · CAA · NRCan Fuel Consumption Guide 2026.

Vehicle Type Fuel / 100km Annual fuel cost vs. gas equivalent
Toyota RAV4 (2.5L gas) Gas ⛽ 8.6 L $3,061
Toyota bZ4X (EV equivalent) EV ⚡ 18.3 kWh $440 Save $2,621/yr
Honda Civic (1.5T gas) Gas ⛽ 7.7 L $2,741
BYD Dolphin / Seal (equivalent) EV ⚡ 14.5 kWh $348 Save $2,393/yr
Ford F-150 (3.5L gas) Gas ⛽ 13.8 L $4,913
Ford F-150 Lightning (EV) EV ⚡ 27.7 kWh $665 Save $4,248/yr
Chevrolet Silverado (5.3L gas) Gas ⛽ 15.2 L $5,411
Chevrolet Silverado EV EV ⚡ 29.4 kWh $706 Save $4,705/yr
A new wave

Chinese EVs are arriving.

Canada's 2026 trade framework opens a 49,000-vehicle quota for Chinese-manufactured electric vehicles — affordable, technologically advanced, and ready to scale. The charging network must scale with them.

BYD

World's largest EV maker. The Dolphin and Seal compete head-on with Tesla on range and price — at 25–30% lower cost.

Targeting Q3 2026 launch
NIO

Premium EVs with battery-swap technology. Direct competitor to Mercedes EQ and BMW i-series in the urban premium segment.

Vancouver pilot
XPeng

ADAS-leading EVs with Tesla-grade autonomy at half the price. P7 and G6 are confirmed for Canadian homologation.

Federal approval pending
Geely / Zeekr

Owns Volvo and Polestar. Brings established Canadian distribution, dealer network, and service infrastructure overnight.

Active in Canada
2024
100% tariff imposed

Canada matches US 100% tariff on Chinese EVs, freezing imports and creating a regulatory holding pattern.

Feb 2026
Tariff framework renegotiated

Canada–China bilateral talks produce a managed-quota framework: 49,000 vehicles permitted in 2026, scaling annually.

Q3 2026
First Chinese EVs land

BYD, NIO and XPeng prepare for staged Canadian launch through Vancouver and Halifax ports. Provincial homologation begins.

2027 →
Mass market inflection

Quota scales to ~150,000 vehicles by 2028. Chinese EVs reshape Canada's under-$40K segment, accelerating mainstream adoption.

中国
2026 trade quota
49,000
vehicles permitted in 2026
Scaling to~150,000 by 2028
Entering viaVancouver · Halifax
Targetingunder-$40K segment
Our markets

Phase 1 launches where it matters.

Voltrise begins in Canada's most EV-ready market — British Columbia — where consumer intent leads the nation and charger utilization is already at breaking point.

Vancouver
Phase 1 · Q3 2026

Vancouver

Canada's highest EV adoption rate. 30% DCFC utilization. The proving ground for the Voltrise network.

12 sites planned DC fast · 350kW Q3 2026 live
EV charging closeup — Kamloops corridor
Phase 1 · Q4 2026

Kamloops

The strategic corridor between Vancouver and the Rockies. Highway-corridor charging for BC's growing EV fleet.

6 sites planned Highway 1 corridor Q4 2026 live
Phase 3 · Atlantic Canada

Coming home to the east coast.

Atlantic Canada holds just 2% of Canada's public ports despite rising EV interest. Phase 3 of the Voltrise rollout brings high-quality charging infrastructure to four underserved provinces — beginning in our New Brunswick home.

🍁

New Brunswick

Home province. Highway 2 corridor sites. Provincial partnership signed Q1 2026.

Nova Scotia

Halifax metro & Cabot Trail. Tourism-grade fast charging by Q2 2027.

🌊

Prince Edward Island

Confederation Bridge to Charlottetown. Island-wide coverage targeted by 2027.

⛰️

Newfoundland

The Trans-Canada gap. St. John's to Port aux Basques charging by 2028.

Voltrise Charging Solutions
Coming soon

A faster way to bring DC fast charging to any site.

Voltrise is partnering with a leading battery-integrated charging technology provider to remove the two biggest obstacles to fast-charger deployment: utility grid upgrades and long construction timelines.

Operational in weeks

New sites can go live in weeks rather than years, using power already available on site — no lengthy construction projects required.

Quick deployment
No grid upgrades needed

Onboard energy storage means fast charging without costly utility upgrades — keeping installation simple and operating costs down.

Low cost
Built to scale with demand

A modular, compact design lets us grow a site's charging capacity over time — and relocate stations easily as demand evolves.

Flexible & scalable
Always-on monitoring

Remote monitoring and over-the-air updates keep every charger running at peak performance, with issues resolved before drivers notice.

Remote management
Resilient through outages

Built-in battery backup keeps charging available even when the local grid is under strain — reliability drivers and fleets can count on.

Grid resiliency
Built for fleets and the public alike

From everyday drivers to commercial fleet operators, this technology helps us bring reliable fast charging to more communities, faster.

For everyone
Get notified when it launches
Partner with Voltrise

Build the network that moves Canada.

Voltrise is raising Phase 1 capital and recruiting site partners across BC and Atlantic Canada. If you own commercial real estate near a highway, a high-traffic retail corridor, or a fleet depot — we want to hear from you.

Partner with us Investor inquiries