Detroit's near future based on SUVs, not EVs, production
plans show
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[March 26, 2020] By
Paul Lienert, Joseph White and Ben Klayman
DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Co <GM.N>
and Ford Motor Co <F.N> have widely touted their commitment to
emission-free electric cars, but their production plans show a growing
reliance on ever-larger gas-powered vehicles.
The two biggest U.S. automakers will make more than 5 million SUVs and
pickup trucks in 2026, but only about 320,000 electric vehicles,
according to detailed production plans for North America seen by
Reuters.
That will be about 5% of their combined vehicle production in North
America, but less than Tesla Inc <TSLA.O>, the world leader in electric
vehicles, produced last year.
The plans show that Detroit's Big Two are betting their short-term
future on satisfying America’s demand for bigger, petroleum-fueled
vehicles which they can sell at a higher profit margin than mostly
smaller, expensive-to-develop electric vehicles.
Large SUVs consume about a quarter more energy than midsize cars,
meaning the plans will most likely wipe out any gains in overall fuel
efficiency or reduction in auto emissions that were targeted over the
next six years, according to industry experts.
The recent collapse of oil prices - pointing toward cheap gas for the
foreseeable future - and a dip in demand caused by the coronavirus may
only serve to strengthen automakers' commitment to the strategy.
Detroit has tried to latch onto the consumer and investor excitement
over electric vehicles made by Tesla, whose market value is double that
of GM and Ford combined, even though its sales are much smaller.
GM executives have been repeating a "zero emissions" mantra since 2017,
and the company's website features a prominent commitment to its
"all-electric future." Ford's Executive Chairman Bill Ford told the
Detroit auto show two years ago: "We’re all in on this. We’re taking our
mainstream vehicles, our most iconic vehicles, and we’re electrifying
them."
But it is hard to detect a major change of direction from the companies'
production plans.
According to data from AutoForecast Solutions seen by Reuters, North
American production of SUV models by GM and Ford will outpace production
of traditional cars by more than eight to one in 2026, and 93% of those
SUVs are expected to be gas-fueled. The data has not previously been
reported.
GRAPHIC: Greener vehicles: how soon? https://graphics.reuters.com/AUTOS-EMISSIONS-SUVS/0100B5LX477/index.html
AutoForecast's data is based on planning information provided to
suppliers by the automakers, and is widely used across the industry. GM
and Ford executives interviewed by Reuters did not dispute the accuracy
of the data.
"GM and Ford understand that buyers want more SUVs and trucks, but
they’re also trying to play to Wall Street, which thinks the future is
all about electric vehicles," said Sam Fiorani, vice president, global
vehicle forecasting at AutoForecast. "The Detroit automakers would love
to get a little of that Tesla magic and money."
See a graphic on automakers' electric plans https://reut.rs/2WH0Q9M
'DON'T VIOLATE THE LAWS OF ECONOMICS'
Internal production plans from other industry sources seen by Reuters
support AutoForecast's numbers, which show GM and Ford expect to produce
about 320,000 pure electric vehicles - powered solely by a battery - in
North America in 2026. That is nearly 10 times the 35,000 they have
planned to build in 2020, but fewer than the 367,500 Tesla delivered
last year.
It is only a fraction of the 5.2 million SUVs and pickups that GM and
Ford expect to make in North America in 2026, according to the
AutoForecast data, up 14% from 4.6 million SUVs and pickups in 2019.
SUVs and pickups will account for about 87% of vehicles made by GM and
Ford in the region in 2026, compared with about 82% last year.
Executives at GM and Ford told Reuters in interviews they are serious
about launching more electric vehicles in the United States in the
coming years, but they are concerned about getting too far ahead of
mass-market demand.
"We’re trying to time this with the natural demand of consumers (so)
we’re not forced to do artificial things and we don’t violate the laws
of economics,” Hau Thai-Tang, Ford’s chief product development and
purchasing officer, told Reuters.
[to top of second column] |
An undated handout photo from General Motors shows one of its six
new different types of electric vehicles that can accommodate the
automaker's flexible battery pack. General Motors/Handout via
REUTERS
GM Chief Executive Mary Barra said in early March the company planned to spend
$20 billion to bring a million electric vehicles a year to market by the middle
of the 2020s. A majority of those are expected to be built and sold in China,
where a government mandate calls for increasing numbers of electric vehicles.
"We want to meet customer demand with the best possible (carbon) footprint on
the planet to help improve the CO2 (carbon dioxide) situation," said Doug Parks,
GM's executive vice president of global product development, purchasing and
supply chain, regarding GM's production plans for SUVs and electric vehicles in
North America.
Read a summary of GM and Ford's electric-vehicle plans here.
CHEAP GAS, BIGGER TRUCKS
The long-term battle between electrons and petroleum to be the primary energy
source for future transportation took an unexpected turn with a crash in oil
this month that sent fuel-pump prices to 20-year lows, with no signs of rising,
making the cost of running internal combustion vehicles even more attractive to
buyers.
The spread of the coronavirus will put more financial pressure on automakers,
according to analysts, limiting their capacity to develop and build money-losing
vehicles. A global recession triggered by the epidemic "could add strain to
balance sheets and ability to fund aggressive technology shifts," said Morgan
Stanley auto analyst Adam Jonas.
In such an environment, automakers are not looking to depart from their winning
formula.
They make more profit on each luxury SUV - such as GM's $80,000 Cadillac
Escalade or Ford's $76,000 Lincoln Navigator - than they do on a dozen compact
cars, according to analysts.
Because of that, automakers are replacing compact sedans with small SUVs that
share many of the car's mechanical parts, but sell for more. Ford discontinued
the Focus compact sedan in the United States, which gets 31 miles per gallon of
gas. Ford customers who want a similar-sized vehicle now can buy a 26
miles-per-gallon Ford Escape compact SUV, whose starting price is $6,000 higher.
That may be good for automakers' finances, but probably not for the environment.
SUVs and pickups burn more fuel and emit more carbon dioxide than comparable
sedans, and those with larger "footprints," - the area between the points where
the wheels touch the ground - are subject to looser emissions standards.
Meanwhile, the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump is threatening to
roll back tougher fuel economy and emissions standards proposed by his
predecessor, Barack Obama, removing an incentive for automakers to make more
fuel-efficient vehicles.
That all indicates that any overall reduction in greenhouse gas emissions
enabled by new electric vehicles will be largely, or entirely, offset by the
continued substitution of gasoline-fueled SUVs for cars, experts say.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) warned of this outcome in October, in a
report that showed growing demand for SUVs across the world was the
second-largest contributor to the increase in global carbon dioxide emissions
from 2010 to 2018.
"If consumers' appetite for SUVs continues to grow at a similar pace seen in the
last decade, SUVs would add nearly 2 million barrels a day in global oil demand
by 2040, offsetting the savings from nearly 150 million electric cars," said the
IEA report. The IEA declined to comment on this story.
The Obama White House predicted that doubling average car and truck fuel
efficiency from 2011 to 2025 would cut greenhouse gas emissions by 6 billion
tons. That does not look likely to happen.
Trump's White House is planning to follow through on its plan to roll back the
Obama rules by the end of March, administration officials have told Reuters.
The Environmental Protection Agency, which regulates U.S. auto emissions, did
not respond to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Paul Lienert, Joseph White and Ben Klayman in Detroit; Additional
reporting by David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Bill Rigby)
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