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		Ford, GM rev up electric pickup trucks to head off Tesla
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		 [September 14, 2019]  By 
		Ben Klayman 
 DETROIT (Reuters) - Large pickup trucks 
		that tow most of the profits in to Ford Motor Co and General Motors Co 
		are holdovers from another century - with heavy ladder frames and big 
		internal combustion engines in the front driving the wheels in the back.
 
 Now, Ford and GM are racing to design radical new takes on their most 
		profitable models, replacing petroleum-fueled engines with batteries in 
		a bid to outflank Tesla Inc's plan to eclipse their brands. Ford's F-150 
		pickup and GM's Chevrolet Silverado are the top selling vehicles in the 
		U.S. market.
 
 "This is going to be a real watershed for the whole industry," Ford 
		Chairman Bill Ford told Reuters in a recent interview. The automaker has 
		disclosed few details about the electric F-series, but Bill Ford hinted 
		the truck could have load-carrying space under the hood in addition to 
		the traditional bed in the back.
 
 "You pick up all that extra space where the engine compartment has 
		been," Ford said. An electric F-Series could be a work truck - with its 
		batteries functioning as a job site power source, he said. And it could 
		be positioned as a high-performance vehicle next to the gas-fueled, 450 
		horsepower Raptor pickup truck.
 
 The Dearborn, Michigan-based company has said it will invest $11.5 
		billion electrifying its vehicles by 2022, including adding 16 fully 
		electric models, all of which will be profitable.
 
		
		 
		
 Ford and GM have more than one reason to take chances on electric 
		pickups - a concept that some analysts and industry executives say could 
		be a small niche.
 
 Electric pickups could help Ford and GM generate the significant sales 
		of EVs they will need to meet tougher emission standards and electric 
		vehicle mandates in California and other states. The Trump 
		administration is moving to roll back those standards, but the electric 
		trucks are a hedge if California prevails.
 
 Governments and corporations - major buyers of pickups - could view 
		electric pickups as a way to show a commitment to reducing greenhouse 
		gas emissions.
 
 Competition from Tesla and EV startups Rivian Automotive and Workhorse 
		Group Inc is another factor, although Ford recently mitigated some of 
		that risk by investing $500 million in Rivian.
 
 Three years ago, Tesla CEO Elon Musk declared he wanted to attack the 
		heart of the Detroit automakers' franchises with a Tesla electric pickup 
		he has described as a "cyberpunk" truck with the performance of a 
		Porsche 911 sports car. Tesla is expected to unveil a prototype this 
		year, with analysts forecasting a 2022 debut. Musk declined to comment 
		for this story.
 
 Officials familiar with Ford and GM's plans said their electric pickups 
		will be introduced by early 2022.
 
 "Our strategy is very clear," Ted Cannis, Ford's director of 
		electrification, told Reuters at the No. 2 U.S. automaker's product 
		development center outside Detroit. "We're going to play to our 
		strengths. We're good at pickups."
 
		
		 
		
 Ford's electric truck will be built on a company EV platform separate 
		from the vehicles it will offer later on a Rivian platform.
 
 Ford has said it will introduce a hybrid F-150 next year. Bill Ford said 
		the all-electric F-150 "won't be too far after that."
 
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			Chevrolet Bolt EV Chief Engineer Josh Tavel poses at the General 
			Motors Orion Assembly in Orion Township, Michigan, U.S. March 15, 
			2016. Steve Fecht/General Motors/Handout via REUTERS. 
            
			 
GM'S ELECTRIC PICKUP PUSH
 At GM, Chief Executive Mary Barra said in April the automaker would make an 
electric full-size pickup, but provided no further details. The company has said 
it plans to invest $8 billion to develop electric and self-driving vehicles, 
launching 20 new EVs globally by 2023.
 
 Officials have not discussed plans for the electric pickup, but GM is pushing to 
introduce it within two years, according to several people familiar with the 
plans.
 
 The lead engineer is Josh Tavel, who was the chief engineer for the Chevy Volt, 
Cadillac ELR, and Spark and Bolt EVs as well as executive chief engineer for 
full-size pickups, GM said.
 
 Rivian CEO R.J. Scaringe believes positive reaction last fall for his company's 
R1T electric truck, due in fall 2020, shows the potential demand.
 
 "The question is how large is the demand and does it translate across all price 
points or does it stay more isolated in the higher price points?" he told 
Reuters at the company's Plymouth, Michigan, headquarters.
 
 Ford officials will not discuss sales expectations for the electric F-150. But 
Bill Ford said the electric pickup could outperform conservative expectations - 
if prospective customers try it.
 
 Ford has broken with pickup segment conventions before - substituting a 
turbo-charged six-cylinder "EcoBoost" engine for the traditional V-8, and then 
giving the current generation of the truck an aluminum body instead of steel, 
the chairman said. The aluminum F-series is the best-selling pickup truck line 
in the United States, and about half are equipped with six-cylinder engines.
 
 "Like it was with EcoBoost and like it was with aluminum, it's important we get 
people in the vehicle to try it," Ford said.
 
 Beau Boeckmann, president of Galpin Ford in the Los Angeles area and one of the 
largest U.S. Ford dealers, said customers are already asking about the truck.
 
 
 "We're going to be shocked," he said. "I think the electric pickup truck has a 
huge future."
 
 Not everyone is so sanguine. Industry tracking firm IHS Markit has estimated the 
entire full-size electric truck segment will account for fewer than 30,000 sales 
in 2026, compared with an expected 2.3 million sales overall.
 
 "We're in uncharted waters," IHS Markit principal analyst Stephanie Brinley 
said. "We're talking niche in the beginning."
 
 Detroit's other big automaker, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV , has no current 
plans for an all-electric Ram, while Toyota Motor Corp is betting more heavily 
on a hybrid Tundra pickup.
 
 "The sliver of volume that's going to be electric pickups is not worthy of a 
business case," said one person familiar with Toyota's plans.
 
 The Detroit automakers ultimately want to defend a segment they see as their 
own.
 
 "Why would we let Tesla beat us with a pickup truck?" said one person familiar 
with Ford's plans. "That's our turf."
 
 (Reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit; Additional reporting by Joseph White and 
Paul Lienert in Detroit; Editing by Joseph White and Matthew Lewis)
 
				 
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