The Welland Tribune

GM races to adapt to new technology

Automakers are responding to the growing demand for electric and autonomous vehicles

- TARA DESCHAMPS

TORONTO — When General Motors Canada workers in Oshawa put down their tools and headed home Monday morning after being told their plant will shut down next year, the automaker billed the closure and impending layoffs as part of a transforma­tion towards a more tech-savvy future.

GM said it was doubling resources allocated to electric and autonomous vehicle programs with a focus on “virtual tools” that will lower developmen­t time and costs and improve quality and the speed it takes to get a product to market.

Experts say the move puts GM in a growing group of vehiclemak­ers revving up their technology-based efforts in a bid to conquer the crowded auto market, where consumers expect the latest in innovation.

Long before GM announced its pivot, Tesla was already disrupting the auto world with cuttingedg­e battery and powertrain technology and the first ever premium all-electric sedan. Meanwhile, Ford was focused on the transporta­tion services market, investing in an on-demand transporta­tion service for non-emergency needs called GoRide and driverless car startup Argo AI.

Even Volkswagen got in on the action, toying with on-board WiFi hot spots and fingerprin­t readers for added security.

“More and more companies have been paying attention to the notion of a connected car,” said Mahmood Nanji, the director of Western University’s Lawrence National Centre for Policy and Management and one of Ontario’s negotiator­s for the bailout of GM and Chrysler following the 2008 financial crisis.

“We are seeing the emergence of all of these different technologi­es from simple things like sensors on vehicles to pretty sophistica­ted things that tell you what is happening with your engine or that have the ability to navigate you.”

Nanji said many of the auto companies pivoting towards technology are doing so because they want to remain competitiv­e, but also because they are reacting to demand.

He didn’t find GM’s Monday announceme­nt surprising because he said the company was forced to re-evaluate its strategies when it fell on hard times during the financial crisis and government­s that bailed it out were clear that if they helped GM, the brand would have to get it right.

Now, Nanji said, “they are looking at where is the market going and thinking where can we go.”

Speaking to reporters on Monday, GM chief executive and chairperso­n Mary Barra conceded that the industry is “changing very rapidly” and innovation­s in propulsion, autonomous driving and connectivi­ty are pushing the company to ensure it is “well-positioned.”

“The vehicle has become much more software-oriented, when you think of that hundreds of millions of lines of code that are in a vehicle that operates today,” she said. “That’s only going to increase, so we need to make sure we have the right skill sets as a part of the General Motors workforce, not only for today, but for the future.”

Barrie Kirk, the president of the Canadian Automated Vehicles Institute, said he doesn’t expect the industry to hit the brakes on its tech push any time soon.

“By the mid 2020s between 40 and 50 per cent of a new car’s value will be technology,” Kirk said. “That’s going to be a huge change.”

 ?? JIM WILSON NYT ?? General Motors debuted its new self-driving vehicle in San Francisco last year. Everyone from ride-sharing platform Uber to Chinese internet services company Baidu is working on driverless vehicles.
JIM WILSON NYT General Motors debuted its new self-driving vehicle in San Francisco last year. Everyone from ride-sharing platform Uber to Chinese internet services company Baidu is working on driverless vehicles.

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