General Motors will launch 10 electric vehicles (EVs) for the South Korean market by 2025, but has no plans yet to manufacture EVs in the country, Steven Kiefer, the head of GM’s international operations said on Friday.
The No. 1 US automaker, which warned last year that persistent industrial action was preventing further investment in South Korea, builds EVs in the United States and China. It also has plans to build the vehicles in Mexico and Canada.
Kiefer’s visit after a Korean labour union delegation went to Detroit in June had led to speculation in local media that he could announce new EV production plans.
“We are not announcing any plans yet to produce electric vehicles in the county, so stay tuned for that,” Kiefer told a media briefing.
GM’s South Korea unit builds about 600,000 vehicles a year, shipping many to the United States including the popular Chevrolet Trailblazer SUV, and employs about 12,000 people. It reported an operating loss of KRW 309 billion (roughly Rs. 1,951 crore) last year.
Kiefer also said GM’s partnership with South Korea battery maker LG Energy Solution was “very bright”.
“Clearly more (battery) capacity is going to be required, so stay tuned for some additional announcements,” he said.
GM and LG are building two battery cell manufacturing plants with a combined annual production capacity of about 70 gigawatt hours in the United States, which could power about 1 million EVs.
In October, GM said LG units had agreed to reimburse it for $2 billion (roughly Rs. 14,893 crore) in estimated costs and expenses associated with a recall of Bolt electric vehicles .
© Thomson Reuters 2021