The city is going to be on the hook for cancelling the race, and Montreal It's Electric owes $6.2 million CAD in unpaid bills. Plante believed that going forward with the race would have cost considerably more, though, and argued that it has long been clear that the Formula E race was headed for a "financial fiasco." It was also a matter of principle, the mayor said -- Montreal can't waste taxpayers' money on "poorly planed projects that don't serve them."

It's not hard to see exactly why Plante would be willing to axe the race. Few cities are so determined to host motorsports (including Formula E) that they burn through public funds to make races happen, yet Coderre was all too eager to do it -- and the benefits weren't as clear as he made them out to be. While Coderre said it was about promoting sustainable energy efforts, it also cost businesses money (by shutting down shops near the race) and created massive transportation headaches. We'd add that Montreal and Québec at large are particularly sensitive to abuses of public funds, having endured corruption scandals for years.

Formula E was "surprised and disappointed" by the decision. It's not completely out of options, though. Even if there's no backup race, it can count on a second New York City race that same month to wind down the season. And it has new races in Rome, Santiago and Zurich to keep things going. Nonetheless, this isn't what the league wanted -- especially when it's losing money, it needs to convince cities that electric racing is a net positive rather than a burden.