Do GM Brownstown Layoffs Indicate No Future Volt Crossover?

1 H BY WADE MALONE 50 employees will be laid off at Chevy Volt battery assembly plant. Since October of 2010, GM’s battery assembly plant in Brownstown, Michigan has assembled battery packs for the Chevy Volt. Packs for the Cadillac ELR and 2015+ Chevy Spark EV were assembled here. Cells for the Volt are produced at… Continue reading Do GM Brownstown Layoffs Indicate No Future Volt Crossover?

BMW and Daimler may offer joint car app

Wednesday, 19/12/2018 14:08 BMW and Daimler are allowed to bundle their forces in car rental and driving services. According to the EU Commission, the US antitrust agency has now also approved the merger of Car2go and DriveNow’s car-sharing fleets with a total of around 20,000 rental cars, as the two automakers announced. The merger is… Continue reading BMW and Daimler may offer joint car app

Tesla-rival Lucid Motors hiring is up 300% since Saudi investment – Thinknum Media

Last fall, California-based electric vehicle startup Lucid Motors ($LUCIDMOTORS) picked up a massive billion-dollar investment from the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia. We reported on the deal last month, nothing that Lucid had embarked on a massive hiring spree. At the time, Lucid had already doubled the number of openings at the company. As of… Continue reading Tesla-rival Lucid Motors hiring is up 300% since Saudi investment – Thinknum Media

‘Waymo’s not on our radar’ – Henrik Fisker on the future of premium shared mobility – Automotive World

At the tap of a button, your ride from the coffee shop to the airport has been confirmed – a ticker on the smartphone displays an approximate arrival time, and a pin highlights the exact pickup location. With little more than a whirr from its electric motors, a shuttle soon glides to the side of… Continue reading ‘Waymo’s not on our radar’ – Henrik Fisker on the future of premium shared mobility – Automotive World

An inside look at Rivian’s EV ambitions from AI batteries to electric jet skis

For a CEO who insists his electric vehicle startup doesn’t want to be Tesla, Rivian founder RJ Scaringe can sound a lot like Elon Musk. Just weeks before unveiling Rivian’s first vehicles — an all-electric pickup and a seven-seater SUV — at the LA Auto Show last month, Scaringe promised an impressive new battery technology… Continue reading An inside look at Rivian’s EV ambitions from AI batteries to electric jet skis

Unifor, UAW turn up the heat on GM

Unifor, UAW turn up the heat on GMThe unions representing U.S. and Canadian auto workers are intensifying their public campaign to keep open five General Motors Co. plants in North America.
As Canadian trade union Unifor argued its case Thursday at GM's Renaissance Center headquarters to keep open the automaker’s Oshawa Assembly Plant in Ontario, the United Auto Workers organized a vigil at the endangered Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly plant.
Unifor National President Jerry Dias said in a press conference in Windsor following his meeting with GM that the conversation was “frustrating,” but says GM did not “unilaterally shut the door.” Dias said the automaker has promised to consider Unifor's concerns and come back with any decisions by Jan. 7.
Unifor's summit with GM leaders comes as the union used four-page ads in Detroit newspapers to chastise the automaker for manufacturing in Mexico at the same time it readies to idle one plant in Canada and four plants plants in the U.S. next year. Unifor amped up efforts to keep Oshawa Assembly running last week with the launch of a social media campaign dubbed #SaveOshawaGM.
Dias held up the front-page wraparound ad during a press conference after his meeting with GM and said it was a message for the automaker and for workers in the U.S.
“The problem isn’t with the American auto worker,” Dias said. “We are standing here with American auto workers that are going to be impacted, and we are here to stand hand in hand with our sisters and brothers who work for GM in the U.S.”
Meantime, the UAW organized a vigil at GM's Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly, which will wind down production entirely by June 1, affecting some 1,350 union-represented workers at the plant. Workers at Detroit-Hamtramck build the Buick LaCrosse, Cadillac CT6, Chevrolet Impala and plug-in hybrid Chevrolet Volt, all of which will permanently cease production next year.
Workers at Oshawa build the Chevrolet Impala and Cadillac XTS, which will be discontinued when production of those vehicles stops at the end of 2019. GM has not yet allocated new product to the plant, which is also winding down production of previous-generation Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups.
Unifor has asked GM to consider continuing production of the older trucks while it looks for a longer-term option.
“The GM restructuring decisions are extremely difficult for Oshawa, but we believe the best approach is to work together to support our employees including support for local training and transition initiatives in the Durham Region,” GM said in an emailed statement following the Thursday meeting with Unifor. “We remain committed to Canada and will continue to engage in dialogue with Unifor.”
Oshawa and Detroit-Hamtramck are among the five plants in the U.S. and Canada GM said it would idle next year as part of a sweeping restructuring of its manufacturing operations and workforce. GM will also cut some 8,000 white-collar jobs by leveraging about 6,000 layoffs. The other U.S. plants include Warren Transmission, Baltimore Operations in Maryland and the Lordstown Complex in northeast Ohio.
Lordstown, which builds the soon-to-be-discontinued Chevrolet Cruze, has become the object of Tesla CEO Elon Musk's desire after he told Lesley Stahl of CBS's “60 Minutes” that he may be interested in using Lordstown as his electric car company looks to grow.
GM's Lordstown plant is not currently for sale. Union representation at the facility poses a problem for Musk, who has fended off UAW-organizing efforts at Tesla's only assembly plant in Fremont, Calif. But Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas said in a report Thursday that he sees a potential for Tesla in Lordstown.
“We merely ask investors to play out a scenario where Elon Musk potentially makes an offer to save the Lordstown plant (saving thousands of jobs in the Lordstown/Youngstown region) that is slated to be shut down over a dispute about EV incentives and labor union negotiations,” Jonas wrote. “In our opinion, given the parties involved in this story … we think there is a distinct possibility that the event path could evolve into something with greater significance for the stocks involved.”
The Detroit automaker said last week it would be able to offer new positions to roughly 2,700 of the 2,800 active U.S. hourly employees affected by the plant idlings. For Canadian workers, GM says it is working with dealers, local colleges and other employers to train and help secure jobs for impacted workers.
“The simple reality is we need to find a solution,” Dias said. Unifor's “campaign will escalate, it will not die down.”
nnaughton@detroitnews.com
Twitter: @NoraNaughton
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Musk, GM weigh fate of Ohio plant Trump wants saved

DETROIT (Reuters) – Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) Chief Executive Elon Musk raised hopes again on Thursday that he could ride to the rescue of a threatened General Motors Co (GM.N) car plant at the center of a political storm about auto jobs, and GM replied, saying the Ohio factory’s fate depends on union talks next year.… Continue reading Musk, GM weigh fate of Ohio plant Trump wants saved

Fate of Ohio car plant to be settled with union next year: GM

DETROIT (Reuters) – General Motors Co said on Thursday the fate of its Lordstown, Ohio, car assembly plant, which Tesla Inc Chief Executive Elon Musk has suggested he might buy, is a matter to be settled with the plant’s union next year. FILE PHOTO: A view of the entrance to the West Plant at the… Continue reading Fate of Ohio car plant to be settled with union next year: GM

Chinese electric sports car Qiantu K50 might be made in U.S., with Coda connection

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Qiantu K50
There's quite a list of Chinese automakers that are relatively unknown outside China yet have grand plans to enter the U.S. market. The latest is China’s Qiantu Motor, which is developing an all-electric luxury sports car called the K50,

The K50 will be sold through California’s Mullen, which claims to be “the affordable electric car company”—although at a price tag that’s the equivalent of more than $100,000 in China, this vehicle may serve as something of a flagship.

Last week Mullen announced a “strategic cooperation agreement” with Qiantu to co-develop, assemble, and exclusively market the K50 in North America—with a potential arrival as soon as 2020.

DON’T MISS: China will lead US in electric cars for this one reason

The K50 is built on an aluminum structure with carbon fiber closures (hood, trunk lid and, we would assume, doors as well). Its 402 horsepower, from two electric motors enables a 0-62 mph acceleration time of 4.6 seconds, and a top speed of 124 mph. With a 78-kilowatt-hour battery pack, it has a claimed 236-mile range on the highly optimistic old European NEDC standard—so likely something less than that for the EPA cycle.

Qiantu K50

If it does arrive via Mullen, it would be quite the contrast piece. Up until now, Mullen has included several car dealerships and primarily sold low speed vehicles, which are limited to 25 mph and intended for golf courses, resorts, large private subdivisions, and urban streets with speed limits of 35 mph or less. It also purchased pieces of the long-defunct electric-vehicle maker Coda, which took a compact Chinese sedan, with 1990s Mitsubishi roots, that was assembled as a “roller” in China, and then upfitted it with an electric powertrain in the U.S.

CHECK OUT: 2012 Coda Sedan: First Drive

In October, Mullen entered a joint-venture agreement with two different companies—Beijing Kingdom Motors (BKM), and Zhejiang Jonway Group. Mullen will be responsible for homologating a BKM vehicle, to be sold as the Mullen 750. And it claims the venture with Jonway will result in an SUV, commercial vehicles, and other passenger vehicles. That company, Mullen claims, has “a set of incredibly versatile and friendly family vehicles that will resonate with the US consumer.”

Starting with that project, Mullen even aims to build passenger vehicles locally “in California and/or Nevada”—which we would have to assume would be in the same way it upfits the Coda Sedan.

Mullen 700e

The company claims to have a “breakthrough battery technology.” Some of Coda’s original launch materials, like an introduction video, remain in use by Mullen eight years later. Some claims in Mullen's material—like that 31-kwh battery pack being 30 percent larger than others—are sorely out of date.

READ MORE: Coda Electric Car Returns From Dead As Mullen 700e At LA Auto Show

We’ve reached out to Mullen for clarification, as the company hasn’t revealed whether this is the same lithium-iron-phosphate pack that powered the Coda Sedan, or if it’s been updated. The Coda Sedan was EPA-rated at 88 miles of range, and Coda was working on a future upgrade to 50 kwh.

In September Mullen hired Weipin Zou, the former senior engineer for Coda, who worked at Faraday Future for some of the years in between.

Coda’s biggest weakness at the time, outside of its unreasonably high price, was the anonymity and relatively poor assembly quality of the car itself, not its powertrain. With all the rapid improvement that Chinese-market vehicles have undergone this decade—K50 sports car or not—we could end up with some interesting electric vehicle possibilities.