Tell GM (and me) what you want from the next Chevy Bolt EV

“Well, duh!”

That may not have been the most frequent response to GM’s announcement it will build a new version of the affordable and popular little Chevy Bolt electric vehicle, but I’ll bet it was in the top two, along with “Yes!!”

Still, GM Chair and CEO Mary Barra’s revelation that the Bolt’s absence will be short-lived was welcome. It was just three months ago General Motors said the little car would die when the suburban Detroit plant that builds it converts to make more profitable electric pickups late this year.

The Bolt will ride again, Barra assured the award-winning EV’s owners, investors and consumers dismayed by the high prices of other EVs.

General Motors Chair and CEO Mary Barra addresses investors Thursday, November 17, 2022 at a meeting in New York, New York.

“Our customers love today’s Bolt,” Barra said Tuesday. “It has been delivering record sales and some of the highest customer satisfaction and loyalty scores in the industry. It’s also an important source of conquest sales for the company and for Chevrolet.”

The Bolt swept the major car of the year awards when it debuted in 2016. It survived an embarrassing recall due to defective batteries, but the addition of the SUV-style EUV model, appealing new features and a price cut fueled a late-life sales surge. Chevy sold 64,322 Bolts and EUVs in 2022.

Saving time and money on Bolt No. 2

The Bolt and Bolt EUV’s 33,659 sales in the first half of this year represent more than 90% of GM’s EV sales so far this year. Those numbers surprised everybody, after the recall halted sales for months. GM probably decided to drop the Bolt before the revival.

The about-face is a smart reaction to changing circumstances. Past regimes at GM would’ve stayed the course; Barra’s team listened to the customer.

Chevrolet cut the 2022 Chevrolet Bolt EUV electric vehicle's price $6,300.

Now, the rest of the organization has to deliver it, not an easy task for a vehicle that survived a reported 19 battery fires to become a customer favorite.

More:GM changes direction, says it plans to make a next-generation Chevrolet Bolt EV

Barra promised to deliver the new Bolt using an accelerated development process: “We will execute it more quickly compared to an all-new program with significantly lower engineering expense and capital investment by updating the vehicle” with the automaker’s new Ultium batteries and motors and Ultifi software.

Why did GM cancel the Bolt?

Simple:

  • The plant that built it is switching to electric pickups, each of which should make several times as much money as a Bolt.
  • GM was 100% focused on its upcoming Chevy Silverado, Blazer and Equinox and GMC Sierra electric vehicles. Their batteries, motors and software should be superior to the Bolt’s technology, offering more range and additional features.