Liveblogging from the Management Briefing Seminar: Bob Lutz Speaks on the Volt
Filed under: EV/Plug-in, Hybrid, GM
This morning at the Management Briefing Seminar in Traverse City MI General Motors Vice-Chairman Bob Lutz will be speaking and making an announcement related to the Chevy Volt/E-Flex program. As the morning progresses we'll be bringing you love coverage of what he says. Stay tuned right here, bookmark and refresh this post every few minutes learn what he has to say. Bob will be taking the stage here at 9:30 am.
9:19 Bob is now on stage joking about a poker playing dog.
He's complaining about so-called experts using the phrase Detroit Dinosaurs and he's not happy about it. "Should we believe that all the domestic manufacturers are the same kind of dumb at the same time?"
GM is in a lot better shape than it was five years ago. The industry is on the cusp of radical change and GM has a head start on transformation.
continue after the jumpSales were down industry wide last month along with GM. GM is the fastest growing company outside North America. A decade ago 80% of global auto sales were in developed countries. Now it's at 62% and falling fast
North American turnaround is progressing. Productivity and supplier relationships are improving. Quality is much better. Buick is tied with Lexus at top of JP Power dependability survey.
New Cadillac CTS getting great reviews. Lambda crossovers are sold out.
GM thinks there are better ways to go forward than CAFE increases but they will play whatever hand they are dealt. Goal remains best possible fuel economy and as much choice as possible.
Four more hybrids coming this year including Saturn Vue/Chevrolet Malibu hybrid and two-mode Yukon/Tahoe. Unfortunately the two-mode hybrid is expensive. This is the only system that works on full sized SUVs. Even companies whose name begins with a T can't do it.
Over 100 fuel cell Equinoxes going to customers this fall.
Company wide commitment to producing Volt and other E-Flex vehicles. We've heard the story already on the E-Flex but Bob is reiterating it right now. Volt is a Chevy because it's a global brand and Volt is being developed in both left and right hand drive versions.
Bob is trying to demonstrate a small radio controlled helicopter. The first one had a low battery. The second one works great. " The problem is landing it" He had a primary and backup helicopter and the remotes go confused. A single setup would work better. The little helicopter is equipped with a lithium ion battery. Lots of energy in the LiIon cell. Same tech in a pack with enough energy to power a vehicle forty miles would be great.
GM has reached agreement with A123 Systems to co-develop nano-phosphate battery cells for automobiles. A123 execs are on hand. GM and A123 will work to specifically develop cells for E-Flex. Not all lithium chemistries are equal. GM wants to better understand battery issues such as durability and thermal management.
Lutz is convinced that electrically driven vehicles are the next great paradigm shift. GM hopes the word gets out and critics start looking at the company with new eyes.
Bob is done for now. We'll be talking to E-Flex vehicle line director Frank Weber and battery development chief Denise Grey later this morning and we'll have more details.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-09-2007 @ 10:05AM
rgseidl said...
There is indeed a tendency in the press and on blogs to lump the Big Three together because all of them were focussed on trucks and SUVs for so long and go caught out when fuel prices rose sharply and failed to come back down below $2.
However, there are big differences in how GM, Ford and Chrysler are addressing their current predicaments. Of the three, GM is arguably in the least bad shape at this time, it just takes time to re-orient such a huge organization and product line.
That said, Maximum Bob's unshakable faith in the success of E-Flex and the Volt has a whiff of desperation about it. There are good reasons why cars have been powered by gasoline rather than electricity for the last century. E-Flex remains revolutionary and therefore a gamble, both technologically and - perhaps less so - in terms of consumer acceptance.
GM North America should do more to hedge its bets, by equipping its upper-mid tier sedans with more sophisticated ICEs. In particular, sufficiently clean diesels and downsized gasoline engines with high boost and idle stop systems. GM doesn't need to lead the pack in these fields, but it cannot afford to lag behind very far.
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8-09-2007 @ 11:04AM
Schmeltz said...
Sam:
Thanks for the literally up to the minute news of this conference. It's a good read and encouraging to hear these things. More power to GM for their pursuits with green technologies! I hope they can do this.
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8-09-2007 @ 4:28PM
Snark said...
"There are good reasons why cars have been powered by gasoline rather than electricity for the last century."
So join us in THIS century. The technology has changed and the challenges are being solved. To assume that the problems of the past will remain problems in the present or future is nothing but nattering.
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8-09-2007 @ 4:36PM
Snark said...
"E-Flex remains revolutionary and therefore a gamble, both technologically and - perhaps less so - in terms of consumer acceptance."
Hardly. Series hybrids have been around for a while. And it's not rocket-science technology, either. The only barrier - and it's now a low one - is the battery technology. A123 has essentially solved this.
"GM North America should do more to hedge its bets, by equipping its upper-mid tier sedans with more sophisticated ICEs."
I'm not a GM fanboy, but GM's ICEs are sufficiently advanced. They have variable valve timing and direct injection on several of their V6's, they have cylinder deactivation, they have mild starter-alternator hybrids, and they've always gotten entirely sufficient economy. They're not truly lagging anybody except in their dogged adherence to pushrod V6s in their mid-range applications, at least in the markets in which they compete. There's plenty of diesel tech in Opels.
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