San Diego Union-Tribune

GM CHARGES UP UNIT TO SELL ELECTRIC-POWERED PRODUCTS

Automaker tapping market for EV delivery vehicles, equipment

- BY TOM KRISHER Krisher writes for Associated Press.

The market for battery-powered delivery vehicles and equipment has so much potential that General Motors is forming a new business unit to serve it, a move that lifted the automaker's stock to a multiyear high.

The first product for the new venture called BrightDrop will be an electric-powered wheeled pallet that will take goods from the warehouse to trucks and from trucks to destinatio­ns. Then GM will roll out a clean electric delivery van.

The pallet, named EP1, will go on sale early this year, with the EV600 van on the roads late in the year with 500 going to FedEx, the company's first customer.

BrightDrop also will offer software and operationa­l support for delivery businesses such as location services, battery status and remote unlocking.

But GM doesn't intend to get into the delivery business, said Pamela Fletcher, GM's vice president of global innovation. “One thing we are not is a logistics company,” she said, adding that GM is working with many companies with experience in the field.

Since late 2018, Fletcher has been in charge of monetizing GM technology by turning ideas into businesses. “We really need to leverage our electrific­ation expertise to other industries,” she said.

Fletcher wouldn't comment on whether BrightDrop products would be sold through existing GM dealership­s or directly by the company. But spokesman Stuart Fowle said the company is working with its independen­t dealers on a separate BrightDrop sales network, with details to come later.

On a webcast, Fletcher said the EP1 pallet can travel up to 3 mph, carrying up to 23 cubic feet of cargo weighing up to 200 pounds. The pallets can reduce the strain on workers but would not operate autonomous­ly, at least to start.

They're already being tested with FedEx, allowing workers to transport 25 percent more packages per day, GM said in a statement.

The EV600 van will have a range of up to 250 miles when fully charged, Fletcher said.

As BrightDrop evolves, it will offer more electric-powered products including a medium-distance vehicle that can carry multiple pallets, the company said.

GM CEO Mary Barra announced BrightDrop in a keynote address as part of the virtual CES gadget show on Tuesday.

She said some countries have set limits on petroleum-powered delivery vehicles to fight pollution at a time when the coronaviru­s has brought dramatic increases in packages. “The pandemic has only accelerate­d those challenges as this sector became our lifeline to goods and services we could no longer access in person,” she said.

During its CES presentati­on, GM even showed a video of a fourrotor autonomous f lying Cadillac pod concept vehicle.

Fletcher said she expects BrightDrop to contribute to GM's bottom line very quickly after its products go on sale.

Last year, Ford Motor Co., GM's main U.S. competitor, announced plans for an electric commercial van that will go on sale late in 2021.

GM has pledged to roll out 30 new electric vehicles globally and spend $27 billion developing them by 2025. New vehicles coming out this year include the electric GMC Hummer pickup, a Chevrolet Bolt electric utility vehicle and the Cadillac Lyriq luxury SUV.

 ?? AP ?? The EP1 electric pallet will be a wheeled pallet to take goods from the warehouse to trucks and from trucks to destinatio­ns.
AP The EP1 electric pallet will be a wheeled pallet to take goods from the warehouse to trucks and from trucks to destinatio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States