jeffmcintirestrasburg

Will GM Revive the Electric Car? Part 1

A GM battery engineer at work in one of the R&D Center's battery labsA GM battery engineer at work in one of the R&D Center's battery labsI just returned from a whirlwind trip to Detroit to attend a really interesting (and pretty unique) event: General Motors brought bloggers and journalists to their Research and Development Center outside of Detroit yesterday not to make a big announcement, or roll out a new vehicle, but to simply provide an update on the development of battery technology for the Chevy Volt and other electric concept vehicles. As the PR rep who coordinated the event told us right before the big presentation, there was really no news; rather, GM really seem to want to keep the media posted on where things stand with these new concepts that received a ton of attention in January.

Now, if you're a skeptic, you're probably thinking something along the lines of "Wow! Who Killed the Electric Car? must've really got their attention!" I think that's accurate — at the auto shows in LA and Chicago, as well as today, company execs. discussed the EV1 project openly and frankly. Their story (and I think it's got some merit): a two-seater with an 80-mile battery range was only going to have limited appeal, and, ultimately, not serve the purpose of really greening the American auto fleet. And that's their real push, they claim — they want to create greener cars that have mass appeal, and fundamentally change the vehicles we drive.

Enter the Volt, which was rolled out at the Detroit Auto Show, and is getting all sorts of attention. It's a sweet car, no doubt, but it's also a concept vehicle at this point. That's another area of criticism: GM does well creating green concept vehicles, but they're not rolling off the production lines. We heard a healthy dose of that in LA from the Rainforest Action Network and JumpStartFord (now Freedom From Oil). Larry Burns, VP of Research and Development, spoke to that criticism when I talked with him in Chicago, and the company continued to respond yesterday. In short, GM has more vehicles in its fleet that average over 30 mpg than any other American auto maker. Furthermore, as CEO Rick Waggoner said in LA, and Burns told us this morning at a bloggers-only breakfast meeting, GM is committed to "reinventing the automobile."

OK… sounds like a good line from the PR department, right? I've got to admit, after talking to Burns one-on-one in Chicago, and then seeing his presentation yesterday, I think we've got to give the company some latitude: they're definitely thinking very big. Burns held a breakfast meeting with four bloggers: Ed Ring of ecoworld, David Houle of Evolution Shift, Sam Abuelsamid of AutoblogGreen, and myself. The thrust of his talk: we're facing big challenges in terms of energy security, climate change and global political instability, and that requires a fundamental rethinking of the automobile. Burns noted that the "DNA" of the car hasn't really changed in 120 years: it contains an internal combustion engine powered by petroleum products, is driven by mechanical systems, and functions independent of other vehicles on the road. GM wants to change those factors: create a vehicle powered by electricity and/or renewable fuels, driven by electronic systems, and connected (via communications technologies) to other vehicles on the road (think accident avoidance, among other things).

This fundamental shift is encapsulated in a concept introduced by GM CEO Rick Waggoner at the Detroit Auto Show: E-Flex. According to Waggoner,

What exactly do we mean by E-Flex? Well, the "E" is no surprise - it stands for "electric," because no matter how an E-Flex vehicle is configured, it will always be driven exclusively by electricity.

This is the major difference between E-Flex and hybrids. Hybrids can be driven by an internal combustion engine, or an electric drive, or both systems simultaneously. E-Flex vehicles will always be driven by electricity.

What about the second half of the name? Well, that's the really interesting part of all this. E-Flex is "flexible" because the electricity it uses to drive the vehicle can come from a wide range of fuel sources. It can come from a hydrogen fuel cell; it can be generated by a small motor running on ethanol or bio-diesel or synthetic fuel; or it can come from the power grid, and be stored in a battery. And, when the electricity comes from the grid, it can be generated by natural gas, coal, nuclear power, wind, hydroelectric, and so on.

In short, E-Flex vehicles will enjoy one of the really outstanding benefits of electricity: the opportunity to diversify fuel sources for the vehicle.

E-Flex is also flexible because it offers flexibility around the globe. Europeans rely more on diesel fuel than North Americans, Brazil has gravitated to E-100 ethanol, and we see tremendous opportunities with bio-fuels here in the U.S. China, meanwhile, may well be the first country to develop a broad-based fuel cell infrastructure.

By setting up a propulsion system that allows us to power vehicles with any of these fuels, E-Flex provides us with a single elegant solution.

In short, E-Flex creates options. It'll allow GM to leverage a range of electrically driven propulsion systems, as well as benefit from the inevitability and the promise of energy diversity.

The concept is really innovative: essentially, GM wants to take the concept of energy diversity, which we've heard much about in the context of electricity production by utilities, and adapt it to the automobile. Rather than creating vehicles based on the assumption that gasoline is the almost universal fuel of choice, E-Flex allows for diversity based on local and regional difference.

Of course, this thinking presents unique challenges. The biggest ones: development of next-generation battery technology, particularly lithium ion batteries for automobiles. This, the company claims, is the main challenge they'll have to overcome before moving the Volt, as well as the Sequel, to production status. They say, though, that they're fully committed to developing this technology, and that, while no firm dates were given, they foresee these vehicles on the road within a 3-5 year time frame.

Too good to be true? That claim was made, with at least one reporter in the battery briefing characterizing the company as having a history of overpromising and underdelivering. In my next post, I'll get into the battery development plans, as well as alternatives that were suggested over and over.

I do think GM is very serious about reinventing the automobile, and that their ideas are much bigger than anything we're hearing from the remaining two companies of the "Big 3." They've provided a pretty specific blueprint for how they'll do that. And, while they don't have firm dates (that probably would be overpromising), they've argued that such developments can happen in a relatively quick time frame. The one question that remains to be answered (and the one that you can help with): how will the public react to this news? Are we willing to give the company the time it needs to make such dramatic changes? Or, has their moment passed? I'm tending towards the former: GM's certainly made its mistakes, but if these plans succeed, we're looking at a revolution in personal transportation…

Disclaimer: GM did cover my expenses for this trip. As with my trip to the Chicago Auto Show, this was done with the understanding that I was free to write (or not to write) whatever I chose…

Cross posted at sustainablog

21 Responses to “Will GM Revive the Electric Car? Part 1”

  1. Otto Strasburg Says:

    Good post. GM must become innovative or lose even more of its market share. They seem to be trying to skip the hybred and go directly to the electric car. If they can beat Toyota and Honda they should be successful. If not, we may be importing all of our cars.

  2. Jeff McIntire-Strasburg Says:

    And that's the one point I should've made a little more clearly: Larry Burns was very clear that they see this as a business imperative.

    _______________________________________

    Jeff McIntire-Strasburg
    Senior Editor
    Green Options
    jeff@greenoptions.com

  3. Doug Korthof Says:

    The EV1 had up to 160 miles range with Nickel Metal Hydride (”NiMH”) batteries, and our Toyota RAV4-EV has over 100 miles range after five years and about 100,000 miles.

    GM does not tell the truth about why they crushed the EV1, and does not talk about why they are ignoring the existing, superior NiMH batteries.

    NiMH has been certified by CARB to cost no more than $225 to $350 per kWh, while the “safe” Lithium is experimental and starts at $1000 per kWh. Even the laptop Lithium 18-650, without the safety ingredients but with all the economies of scale, costs about $500/kWh.

    NiMH is the standard for plug-in EVs, the only EV battery that lasts longer than the life of the car, the most studied and tested EV battery, and the only one field-tested in the 1999 EV1, the Ford Ranger-EV, the Honda EV-plus, and the hundreds of Toyota NiMH RAV4-EV.

    By ignoring NiMH, and spending money on a wild goose chase for Lithium, GM reveals that the PR stunt of the VOLT is just a PR stunt. Gosh, what a surprise.

  4. Richard Says:

    I fully agree. For a 40 mile range, you could put lead acid batteries and replace them in 5 years. Voila, two changes and you have 10 years. With good battery mgt, they could last longer and we could have the Volt now. If better batteries develop before then, at next battery change, replace them. GM, get moving already.

  5. Jeff McIntire-Strasburg Says:

    Doug and Richard– I'll be providing the answers I have in the next post… I appreciate your questions.

    _______________________________________

    Jeff McIntire-Strasburg
    Senior Editor
    Green Options
    jeff@greenoptions.com

  6. Unregistered User Says:

    I really get amused by the dopes who actually swallow the pure BS that skinny little snot Chris Paine put on film. I notice that he pricked a subject for his totally fictional documentary that
    virtually no one knew anything about. It’s easy to tell lies when the audience is young, ignorant, and ready to believe ridiculously inane conspiracy theories. One dispassionate lok at the crappy EV-1 would totally destroy Paine’s shaky credibility.
    All of us electric car afficiandos have always known that the only way a viable electric car can be built is with a practical electric battery, of which none then existed and still don’t. Notice that GM is willing to wait 2 years for a battery good enough even for a plug-in hybrid with limited range and no requirement to be quickyl rechargeable. In other words, slow-witted friends, the VOLT is not an electric car in the mistaken manner in which this blog is using the term. To use your own vernacular, the GM electric car didn’t end with that programs long needed cancellation - the concept simply was transferred to a better vehicle that was a fuel cell development auto. That basic architecture, sans fuel cell, is the Chevy VOLT. So the claim here that GM is resurrecting the elctric car is absurdly idiotic. It was the development of new battery technologies from Altair, A123 Systems, EEStor and others that led GM to conceive the VOLT It certainly wasn’t any historically nonsensical
    film by a simple minded amateur filmmaker that
    made the VOLT (which is a HYBRID, not an electric)
    possible … perhaps. A suitable battery still isn’t in existence.

  7. David Anderson Says:

    Thanks for your… point of view, but there are many individuals (see above) and companies who would disagree that no battery technology is available. Ask Altair about the NanoSafe battery being deployed in the new Phoenix electric truck.

    And you don't help your case by making personal comments about Chris Paine, or anyone. Instead, consider using that space to explain any merits your point might have.

    -David

    Editorial note: we could just delete these anonymous, extreme comments as they appear, or restrict commenting access to members, but I think it's good to be able to compare the level of discourse among all parties. What do you think?

     

  8. paul Says:

    “NiMH has been certified by CARB to cost no more than $225 to $350 per kWh”

    Have you seen the price of nickle recently? Mass scale adoption of NiMH would drive the price through the roof. Definitely not a technology to bet a long term future on.

    We need a technology that can be scaled to millions of cars because anything less will have NO measurable effect on the environment. It might keep a few EV fanatics happy but that’s it.

  9. Jay Davis Says:

    Jeff, I like the explanation given for the death of EV1, it certainly was a niche vehicle ahead of its time. The Volt represents a true frameshift, or watershed event in the history of the automobile, and I think GM has got the formula right. I look forward to the battery details (as if there are any :>). P.S. Everyone is invited to participate in our dedicated site: http://www.gm-volt.com

  10. Jeff McIntire-Strasburg Says:

    Well, "absurdly idiotic" seems a bit strong, but OK: the Volt is a series hybrid that's propelled by an electrical engine, with a gas engine that recharges the battery. And you'll note I never claimed that Paine's film inspired the Volt: that would be absurdly idiotic, as I'm certain such a concept couldn't have been developed that quickly. Rather, I was referring to GM's framing of the issue… Is that better? A suggestion: there are numerous decaffeinated brands that taste just like the real thing…

    _______________________________________

    Jeff McIntire-Strasburg
    Senior Editor
    Green Options
    jeff@greenoptions.com

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