Looking at the article by the CBC, "Electric cars 'the best vehicle' in frigid temperatures, Sask. advocates say," by Hannah Spray, there is barely any evidence to back up the claim that suggest electric vehicles do better in colder temperatures compared to gas powered vehicles. The only real numerical evidence in the article actually goes against the claim that electric vehicles are better as Tyler Krause, a board member of the Saskatchwen Electric Vehicle Association, states that his Tesla Model 3 usually can travel 500 kilometers, but in the cold it can only go 300 kilometers. Otherwise, in the news article, Tyler Krause and Matthew Pointer, just state how much they love using their electric car, but people are blind to see that both of them have bias point of views being a part of the Saskatchwen Electric Vehicle Association. If they advocate and mislead the public that electric vehicles are better in the winter, it can boost their goal for more people to adopt electric cars. I also find it ironic how if you look at the Saskatchwen Electric Vehicle Association website, in their goal statement it states, "We focus our efforts on educating the general public about the benefit of Electric Vehicles," even though they provide zero information about how electric cars are better, but decide that if they say they are good, people will follow. I found an article by CBS News called, "Why Teslas and other electric vehicles have problems in cold weather," in which they provide evidence on how electric vehicles are terrible in the winter. They interview a man named Scott Case, who is the CEO of Recurrent as well as a Electric Vehicle Expert, who says that, "EVs definitely lose some of their driving range in extreme cold." Recurrent also did some research finding out that 70% of 18 popular EV models have reduced driving range in colder temperatures. If we also look at the Mercedes-Benz Of Chantilly website, they look at an AAA study in which they find out that, "At 20 degrees, the average driving range fell by 12 percent when the car's cabin heater was not used."
Sources:
1)
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/teslas-electric-vehicles-cold-weather/
2)
https://www.mercedesbenzofchantilly.com/service/service-tips-and-tricks/electric-cars-in-winter/