They thought Canada’s empty auto plants were finished. Now, they may become the center of a global EV trade storm.

Behind closed doors, a controversial plan involving Chinese-made electric vehicles and a quiet Ontario factory is suddenly raising alarms across North America’s auto industry.
Canada’s automotive future is being pulled into the middle of a high-stakes geopolitical and economic battle after reports emerged that Stellantis is exploring a plan to build Chinese electric vehicles at its idled Brampton assembly plant in Ontario.
At first glance, the proposal sounds like a lifeline. The Brampton facility, once one of Canada’s major auto production hubs, has been largely silent since production shifts moved Jeep manufacturing south to the United States. Thousands of workers were left without jobs, and surrounding businesses—from parts suppliers to restaurants and trucking firms—felt the shockwaves almost instantly.
Now, whispers of reopening the plant should be good news. But instead, the discussions are igniting fears that Canada could become a strategic “middle ground” in a growing EV trade war between China and the United States.
According to industry discussions highlighted by Bloomberg, Stellantis may be considering a model where electric vehicles are mostly manufactured overseas—potentially in China—before being shipped to Canada for final assembly work.

That final stage could include installing key components, system testing, software integration, and preparing the vehicles for North American sale.
And that’s where the controversy explodes.
The United States has imposed steep tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles in an effort to protect domestic automakers from low-cost competition flooding the market. But under the rules of the USMCA trade agreement, products that undergo substantial transformation in North America can sometimes qualify for different treatment.
Critics fear companies may be searching for ways to legally navigate around those tariffs by shifting the final stages of assembly into Canada.
Not everyone is calling it a loophole. Trade experts point out that strict labor requirements, regional sourcing thresholds, and manufacturing rules still apply. But even the possibility of stretching those interpretations is making policymakers extremely nervous.
Canadian officials are already signaling they do not want Ontario factories reduced to little more than “kit-car” assembly hubs—facilities that simply bolt together vehicles largely built elsewhere while the real manufacturing value stays overseas.
The concern runs far deeper than one factory.

If this model spreads, it could fundamentally reshape manufacturing across North America. Instead of countries producing vehicles from the ground up, factories could increasingly become final-stop assembly centers for products made elsewhere. That shift would threaten thousands of high-paying industrial jobs tied to steel production, parts manufacturing, logistics, and engineering.
For Canada, the stakes are enormous.
The Brampton plant itself has a history stretching back to the 1960s and once produced roughly 150,000 vehicles annually at peak capacity. Losing that scale of production already left a massive economic crater. Communities built around the plant have spent years waiting for signs of revival.
Now they face a difficult question: is partial production better than no production at all?
Supporters of the idea argue the global auto industry is changing too quickly for old manufacturing models to survive untouched. Chinese EV makers currently dominate global battery supply chains and produce electric vehicles at costs Western automakers are struggling to match. Collaborating with Chinese production networks, they say, could help North America stay competitive during the EV transition.
But opponents warn that short-term survival could come at a devastating long-term cost.

If Canada allows minimal assembly operations to qualify as domestic manufacturing, critics argue it could weaken the very industrial base governments are trying to protect. Over time, factories might employ fewer workers, source fewer local parts, and rely increasingly on imported components while still technically carrying a North American production label.
That’s why Ottawa is now laying down conditions.
Canadian officials have made it clear that any future automotive production at Brampton must involve real economic investment, meaningful local sourcing, union participation, and long-term commitments—not simply a cosmetic final assembly process designed to navigate trade rules.
The battle unfolding around this quiet Ontario factory may ultimately become a defining test for the future of manufacturing itself.
Because in today’s economy, products no longer come from one country alone. Supply chains stretch across continents, trade agreements blur borders, and governments are racing to protect industries while staying globally competitive.
And somewhere in the middle of that storm sits an empty Canadian factory that may soon decide far more than the fate of one automaker.