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GM Sets Target of 600K Electric Pickups Per Year

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General Motors is committing nearly $7 billion – the single largest investment in its history – toward building more electric trucks and EV batteries in Michigan.

The plans revealed Tuesday include a battery-cell plant and the conversion of GM’s Chevrolet Bolt assembly plant to build battery-powered versions of the Chevy Silverado and GMC Sierra full-size pickups. The investment eventually would let GM build up to 600,000 full-size electric pickups in the U.S. annually.

“Today we are taking the next step in our continuous work to establish GM’s EV leadership by making investments in our vertically integrated battery production in the U.S., and our North American EV production capacity,” GM CEO Mary Barra said in a statement. “Our plan creates the broadest EV portfolio of any automaker and further solidifies our path toward U.S. EV leadership by mid-decade.”

The new battery plant in Lansing, Mich., and conversion of the Orion Township assembly plant marks the next step in GM’s commitment to electrification as rival Ford Motor Co. begins construction of two EV campuses in Kentucky and Tennessee.

GM has promised to spend $35 billion on electric and autonomous vehicle development, launch 30 EVs globally and have more than 1 million units of EV capacity in North America, all through 2025. By 2030, GM aims to convert half of its North American assembly capacity to EV production.

Click here to see the full report from Hannah Lutz at AutoNews.com.

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