Size matters in the car industry and the Chevy Bolt is proof of that.
Ten years ago, a little known tech entrepreneur named Elon Musk published a secret master plan for Tesla Motors, an ambitious electric car startup he had funded.
Revolutionary technologies always start as impractical and expensive, Musk explained, so Tesla’s first car would be a two-seat roadster that sold for $110,000. But by ploughing profits from that car into research and production capacity, Musk promised that Tesla would quickly create a series of cheaper cars in higher volumes, all toward an almost mythical aim: creating a long-range electric car that could travel more than 200 miles on a single charge, but that cost less than $40,000 for the privilege.
This year, Musk’s white whale — a car that will get 238 miles per charge, and will sell for about $30,000 after a federal rebate — will finally make it to the roads. Musk’s master plan has gone exactly as he promised, except for one tiny hitch.
A first affordable long-range electric car, which I drove last month and which blew my mind, is not a Tesla. I had to fly from Silicon Valley to Detroit to drive it because the vehicle was invented not by a celebrated startup, but by that hoariest cliché of tarnished American manufacturing glory, Chevrolet, which is owned by General Motors.
The car is the Chevy Bolt EV, a squat, wedge-shaped compact hatchback. It is an important car for GM, and, in a larger sense, for the traditional auto industry. It demonstrates the seriousness with which automakers are taking the threat posed by startups that are promising to alter everything about the car business. Not only is the Bolt the first in expensive long-range electric on the road, but it will also function as GM’s platform for testing new models for ride-sharing and autonomous driving.
This story is from the October 16, 2016 edition of THE WEEK.
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This story is from the October 16, 2016 edition of THE WEEK.
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