Boston Herald

CADILLAC TAKES ON TESLA

GM says electric SUV checks all of luxe competitor’s boxes

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DETROIT — We’ve seen this movie before, an electric vehicle from a mainstream automaker that will take away sales from market leader Tesla.

But General Motors executives say Cadillac’s first fullyelect­ric vehicle has all the features it needs to lure buyers where other companies fell short.

The Cadillac Lyriq, a midsize SUV that comes out first in China and reaches U.S. showrooms late in 2022, will be able to go more than 300 miles on a single charge. It will come in rear-drive and all-wheel-drive configurat­ions with sleek looks, a premium interior, internet connectivi­ty, a 33-inch dashboard touch screen, and a starting price tag somewhere below $75,000.

“Prior product offerings, at least on some of those measures, they fell a bit short,” said Steve Carlisle, GM’s

North American president who used to run the Cadillac brand.

GM was to introduce a Lyriq “show car” Thursday night that executives say is close to the production version. And they’re confident it will succeed where the Jaguar I-Pace and Audi e-tron thus far have failed.

The Lyriq will go head-tohead with Tesla’s Model Y small SUV, which starts at just under $50,000. The Lyriq also could take sales from the

Palo Alto, Calif., company’s other models.

GM wouldn’t release the SUV’s exact range or price, nor would it say if the Lyriq would match or beat the Model Y’s 316-mile range or best zero to 60 miles per hour time of 3.5 seconds. The Model Y can easily top $60,000 with options.

But executives said the Lyriq’s underpinni­ngs are designed specifical­ly to be an electric vehicle, with balanced weight distributi­on. They promised crisp handling and fast accelerati­on powered by the latest generation of nickel-cobalt-manganese-aluminum battery chemistry.

The Lyriq also will be able to park itself in parallel or perpendicu­lar spaces without the driver being in the vehicle, similar to technology offered by Tesla. It also has direct current fast-charging capability, but charging times weren’t released.

Jaguar’s I-Pace and Audi’s e-tron fell short of the Model Y on range, with the I-Pace going 234 miles per charge and the e-tron SUV at 222 miles.

Cox Automotive Executive

Analyst Michelle Krebs said having a range of over 300 miles is important to customers, who in surveys still express fears of running out of juice in an electric vehicle. People also are concerned about charging vehicles outside their homes, but that network should be vastly better by the time the Lyriq goes on sale, she said. Tesla, which has its own global network of chargers, giving it an advantage over competitor­s.

Cadillac may check all the boxes to compete with Tesla, but it can’t match the brand and the mystique of CEO Elon Musk, who also leads rocket company SpaceX, Krebs said.

“People buy a Tesla because it’s a Tesla,” she said. “Tesla has done an amazing job of building a brand, doing it without advertisin­g and marketing, just pure enthusiasm from consumers.”

 ?? general Motors via aP ?? CONTENDER: The Cadillac Lyriq has all the amenities, fit and finish needed to take on Tesla in the electric vehicle luxury segment, GM says.
general Motors via aP CONTENDER: The Cadillac Lyriq has all the amenities, fit and finish needed to take on Tesla in the electric vehicle luxury segment, GM says.

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