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This handout image obtained on January 12, 2021, courtesy of Cadillac/General Motors shows Cadillac in its recent product blitz derived from GM’s future EV platform, as GM announced that Cadillac will be at the vanguard of the company’s move towards an all-electric future. Photo: Cadillac/General Motors / AFP

General Motors is doubling down on its push into electric vehicles with luxury and commercial models to take on tech start-ups

  • The carmaker said it’s creating a wholly owned company called BrightDrop that not only supplies battery-powered vans but also offers fleet-management services
  • GM showed two futuristic Cadillac EV concepts and gave a peek at multiple vehicles from other brands in its CES presentation, including a red Chevrolet battery-powered pickup
General Motors is doubling down on its push into electric vehicles with new luxury and commercial models designed to tap what it expects will be fast-growing demand for battery-powered transportation.

The carmaker said it’s creating a wholly owned company called BrightDrop that not only supplies battery-powered vans but also offers fleet-management services. GM also previewed several upscale models for well-heeled retail buyers.

“Global EV market penetration stands at around 3 per cent,” Mary Barra, GM’s chief executive officer, said in a Tuesday speech at CES, which used to be called the Consumer Electronics Show. “We believe that is all about to change.”

GM has sought to align itself with a move into EVs that has excited Wall Street analysts and led investors in recent months to make huge bets on next-generation automotive technology ranging from lasers for self-driving cars to electric-vehicle start-ups.
General Motors’ CEO Mary Barra during the 2017 North American International Auto Show in Detroit on January 9, 2017. Photo: Detroit Free Press/TNS

The company’s shares pared a gain of as much as 8.8 per cent – an intraday record – to trade up 6.4 per cent to US$47.89 as of 2:15pm in New York.

GM showed two futuristic Cadillac EV concepts and gave a peek at multiple vehicles from other brands in its CES presentation, including a red Chevrolet battery-powered pickup that is more of a work truck than the electric Hummer that goes on sale later this year.

Two futuristic Cadillac concepts, an electric shuttle and an autonomous vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) drone, are seen in a still image from video presented by General Motors (GM) at the 2021 CES show on January 12, 2021. Photo: Handout via Reuters.

These models are part of the carmaker’s pledge to spend US$27 billion on battery-electric and self-driving vehicles and to roll out 30 electric models globally by the end of 2025. GM even updated its corporate logo last week for the first time in almost six decades to better reflect its new focus on electrification.

The commercial fleet business is the latest salvo in Barra’s efforts to accelerate GM’s development and deployment of electric power trains. She told CES the world has hit an inflection point and the time is right for buyers to switch to electrics.

BrightDrop – whose customers will include FedEx – plans to sell electric pallet movers this year and an electric cargo van next year, GM said in a statement.

Analysts believe the number of delivery vans on city streets is set to increase by at least a third in the coming decade - and GM wants in on the business. Photo: DPA
“We believe in an all-electric future, and we think it will take more than electrification of our consumer vehicles to get there,” Pam Fletcher, the company’s chief innovation officer, told reporters.

In addition to the FedEx deal, GM has letters of intent from many other shipping companies, Fletcher said.

BrightDrop will offer software and services to enable fleet customers to track goods and vehicles and also plan shipping routes. GM estimates the market for delivery of food and packages and related logistics in the US could be as big as US$850 billion by 2025.

Sales of an enclosed cargo pallet known as EP1 and capable of carrying 200 pounds of goods will begin this quarter. GM said the vehicle can be used to move items around a warehouse or from a truck to the front door of a package recipient.

Early next year the carmaker plans to launch the electric van, which can travel as far as 250 miles on a single charge and will be dubbed the EV600 – a play on the vehicle’s 600 cubic feet of cargo space.

The van is bigger than Ford Motor Co.’s planned E-Transit and has twice the range, said Guidehouse Insights analyst Sam Abuelsamid.

This combination of pictures created on January 08, 2021 shows (left) the old General Motors logo with GM's new logo (right). Photo: AFP

The new business unit will be led by Travis Katz, who came from online travel company Skyscanner and before that, Trip.com, where he was CEO and co-founder.

During GM’s CES presentation, Mike Simcoe, head of global design, previewed the two space-age concepts from Cadillac. One is a small self-driving, vertical-take-off aircraft that runs on electric power and the other is an urban shuttle that resembles a living room on wheels. Like the EP1 and EV600, both also would run on the automaker’s own Ultium battery pack. GM did not say if it will build either one.

Simcoe said GM will start selling a more practical and freshened Chevy Bolt EV compact hatchback and a slightly larger version of the model – called the Bolt EUV – this summer. He also said the carmaker will add three new plug-in SUVs to its Buick line-up in China.

GM’s design team also showed off the Celestiq, an ultra-luxury battery-powered car. It will have a glass roof with four panels that allows each passenger select a different level of shading from outside light.

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