General Motors Company (NYSE:GM) is to spend $800 million as it looks to enhance its electric car manufacturing capabilities. The company is to spend a good chunk of the investment in converting its CAMI Assembly plant in Canada to an EV manufacturing facility.
GM $800 Million Bet
The factory up for major upgrades is currently the home for Chevrolet Equinox. Once all the necessary equipment and tools are installed, the facility will be the headquarters of GM Bright Drop division, a unit created to accelerate electric cars' development in under two years.
General Motors has already unveiled EV600, a purpose-built commercial van that will use its Ultium electric vehicle platform. The EV van should be available by 2022 and will have a range of 250 miles per charge. However, it is still unclear for how much it will go on sale.
The electric van is already eliciting demand even before it goes into full production. FedEx has already been confirmed as the first customer. FedEx is looking to revamp its fleet of trucks as it looks to reduce its carbon footprint.
GM EV Ambitions
The $800 million investment affirms General Motors' electric vehicle push, which has gathered pace in recent months. The CAMI factory in Ontario becomes the fourth factor to be converted for electric vehicle production.
Chief Executive Officer Mary Barra has already outlined an ambitious plan that, if successful, will see General Motors release 30 all-electric cars by 2025. Likewise, the company plans to unveil a new logo rebrand focusing on an electric future.
General Motors has already set aside $27 billion to launch the 30 electrified vehicles by 2025. Some of the cars in the public domain include Chevy Bolt EV Hummer EV pickup and the Cadillac Lyriq SUV.
Given the amount of resources and investments that General Motors has set aside, a vast portfolio of its assembly line will be made of electric cars sooner. Likewise, the company hopes to take on Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA), which dominates the EV space.