GM’s EV issues may find resolution during UAW strike

GM’s EV issues may find resolution during UAW strike

CompaniesFord Motor CoFollowGeneral‌ Motors CoFollowStellantis NVFollowDETROIT,‍ Sept 17 (Reuters) ⁣-⁤ General Motors (GM.N) is at greater risk than⁢ rivals Ford⁤ Motor (F.N) and ⁤Stellantis (STLAM.MI) of disruption to electric⁢ vehicle production from a prolonged ⁤UAW strike – though some analysts say that could⁤ also buy⁢ it⁣ time to repair nagging ⁣issues.While Ford and Stellantis are introducing several revamped combustion-engine models this fall, GM’s‍ immediate focus is on electric vehicles – with plans to launch or ‌ramp up production of at least five new‌ ones. ​They include all-electric companions to its full-size⁣ Chevrolet Silverado and⁢ GMC Sierra ⁢pickups, according to researcher GlobalData.GM has been struggling much‍ of the year to smooth out hiccups in battery manufacturing as well as ⁣its EV supply ‍chain and logistics, including ⁢delivery to dealers of its Cadillac‌ Lyriq ‍and GMC Hummer EVs.The company delivered just 1,348 Lyriqs and 47 Hummers ‍in the second quarter, ⁢far below expectations, in part because of issues with battery ⁣module assembly.Chief Executive Mary Barra in‍ July told analysts: “Our automation equipment supplier is struggling with delivery issues,” causing​ a bottleneck that had forced the automaker to⁣ assemble⁤ battery modules by hand.In July, GM executive ‍Rory ⁢Harvey said the company was working ‌out ​delivery‍ issues to dealers,‍ noting that Lyriq and Hummer “have been going down‍ the line⁢ in very limited‌ quantities (but) we ​are building momentum.”A longer strike⁤ could help GM address and potentially resolve some of those ongoing issues in its EV and ‍battery operations, according to Sam Fiorani, vice​ president of global ⁤vehicle forecasting​ at AutoForecast Solutions.”A production stoppage could allow GM ​to solve bottlenecks,” Fiorani ⁢said.The automaker has not been able⁤ to roll out its most important EVs in a ‌timely fashion, but could benefit if‌ it⁤ used the labor stoppage to resolve some of its technical and ⁤operational issues, he said.”GM⁣ could ramp ​up output faster once‍ the factories start running again,” said Fiorani.’POTENTIAL NIGHTMARE’Other analysts⁢ say the stoppage is unlikely to work out in GM’s favor. GM’s Barra herself‌ said the strike “would not be positive” for⁣ the ‍company and that​ it needed​ to reach a deal with workers quickly.”For GM, a possible byproduct of an extended strike ‌may be more⁤ time to work out any kinks they are having with⁢ their EV launches, but⁣ the potential loss of billions of dollars in the process‍ would​ make it​ hard⁤ to justify such​ a ‘silver lining,'” said Bill Rinna, GlobalData’s director ⁤of Americas vehicle forecasts.Wedbush ⁢auto analyst Daniel Ives said the strike‌ was “a potential nightmare situation”⁢ for GM given it comes exactly at a key period of ironing out EV issues.”In this crucial period‌ of EV execution, model roll-outs, distribution, marketing, with EV competition⁢ rising across the ‍board, ‍the timing could not⁣ be ⁢worse,” Ives said in a research note.In addition, ‌the UAW strike in the United…

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