No need to apologize, at least not to me! Until my kids joined Scouting, and I learned more about it, I assumed that other countries operated in a similar fashion to the US.
One thing I love about these boards is discovering similarities and differences between countries or regions.
I love that about these boards, too!
FWIW, Canadian Scouts are also co-ed. And we have Girl Guides, which is for girls both biological and trans.
Girl Guides is not a girl version of Scouts. It's a very different organization, largely focussed on helping girls find personal power and independence in a society that still sometimes silences girls.
Just by way of example, my own daughter had to struggle against male classmates who told her that "girls aren't good at math", and said that she should just be quiet when working in groups with them. Thanks to an understanding maths teacher, she was allowed to do the group work on her own (and got better grades than the boys who'd told her she was no good). She was very lucky her teacher wasn't all hung up on "learning teamwork"!
Girls Guides attempts to tackle this type of societal problem, by providing girls with opportunities to excel and compete with each other, in a non-male dominated environment.
Canadian Scouting however, is more about developing well-rounded youth, who are prepared to make a positive contribution to the world. There's nothing about it that is gender-specific.
I enrolled both my boy and my girl in Scouts, for convenience's sake more than anything. But I thoroughly support the Girl Guides' mission, and no... I don't see a specific need at this time for a matching "Boy Guides". We've come a long way, but in our society girls are still somewhat disadvantaged (a less determined girl than mine, for example, might have given up on maths when faced with her classmates' antagonism). Not everything we offer to our boys and girls has to be exactly identical. It's okay to give special attention to one or the other, as the need arises.
"From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs," may be Marxism, but I still like it lots better than, "Even-steven!"