DETROIT -- A
zero-emission Hummer sounds as paradoxical as non-alcoholic whiskey, but
General Motors is mulling over the idea of building an electric vehicle that
would bring the defunct gas-guzzling brand back to life.
For now, it’s just an
idea GM is considering as it plans which vehicles will be included in a fleet
of electrified SUVs and trucks, say people familiar with the matter. The Hummer
name has surfaced as way to tap growing demand for rugged SUVs with off-road
capabilities, while avoiding the gasoline-burning image that made the brand
something of a pariah a decade ago, said the people, who asked not to be named
because the conversations are private.
Electric Hummer chatter
comes as GM is looking to transform itself from a conventional, gas-powered-vehicle
maker into what CEO Mary Barra calls an “all-electric future.” Hummer is one of
many options GM is exploring as it races to develop the next generation of
battery-powered vehicles. Several other car companies also are rushing to
produce commercially viable electric-powered models.
When asked about it, GM
President Mark Reuss was unconvinced.
“I love Hummer,” Reuss
said on the sidelines of a press conference on June 12. “I’m not sure. We’re
looking at everything.”
Building an electric
Hummer may never come to pass, but without electrification, GM would have a
tough time selling a traditional Hummer in an era when emissions rules have
become much stricter than in the brand’s heyday.
BEV3 project
GM is currently working
on two major battery-electric vehicle programs. The first is its BEV3 project,
which will develop passenger cars, crossover SUVs and a variety of other small
and mid-sized models. That’s part of the automaker’s pledge to put 20 EVs on
the road globally by 2023. The second program would make electric pickups and
other full-size vehicles, some of which can go off-road.
In its family of brands,
GM has large SUVs -- such as the Chevrolet Suburban and Cadillac Escalade -- as
well as hulking GMC vehicles including the Sierra truck and Yukon SUV. GMC also
has Denali-labeled models that denote luxury and an AT4 brand for off-road
capable trucks. Any of those potentially could be offered with electric
powertrains, Reuss said.
“It’s massive. There
might be places where we go first that are not just heavy-duty work trucks but
more style and capability for off-road,” he said. “There are lots of things
that are very attractive.”
BLOOMBERG/Aotomotive
News Data Center
GM kept Hummer after its
2009 bankruptcy but halted sales in 2010. Back then, the 10-miles-per-gallon
Hummer H2 made the brand a symbol of automaker indifference to global warming.
The vehicle was so heavy its weight placed it beyond the reach of federal government
rules for fuel-economy tests, further enraging environmentalists. Hummer’s
death knell came when oil soared past $100 a barrel, spiking gas prices and
sinking sales.
GM bought the brand in
1998, six years after AM General debuted it as a civilian version of the
armored Humvee military vehicle made famous for its role in the Gulf War. Actor
and former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger was an early and very public
advocate for the brand and its first model, which later became known as the H1.
GM sales started with the H2 model in 2002, a $60,000 SUV made using some parts
from Chevy pickups and SUVs. It was a smash hit among buyers looking for brawn
and bling, prompting the Detroit automaker to follow up with the mid-sized H3
SUV and H3T pickup truck.
Demand for Hummer
vehicles peaked in 2006 with U.S. sales of 71,524 vehicles, but fewer than
4,000 were sold by 2010, according to the Automotive News Data Center.
Watching Jeep
Over the past few years,
GM has been watching the growth of Jeep, the crown jewel and moneymaker of Fiat
Chrysler Automobiles, and wondering if Hummer might win a piece of that market,
said the people familiar with the brand discussions.
GM sees an opportunity
to compete with Jeep for off-road vehicles that have creature comforts
commanding high premiums, two of the people said. The company’s designers have
done work with Hummer concepts and have experimented with Hummer styling cues
on future GMC brand models.
Even if GM goes through
with a plan to make an electric Hummer, it would be years away. GM’s planned
electric-truck project is well underway, but those models aren’t expected to
launch until after the debut of the BEV3 architecture for smaller vehicles.
Cadillac or one of the higher-volume brands would probably get some of the
first models on the larger electric-truck-based platform.
Earlier this year, GM
was negotiating to form a joint venture with Rivian Automotive Inc., a startup
electric-truck maker based outside Detroit. When the deal fell apart, GM
accelerated development of its own battery-powered pickup and SUV program.
It’s not alone in
thinking there’s latent demand for large and luxury-market vehicles. When the
GM deal died, Ford Motor Co. invested $500 million in Rivian with plans to
build an electric pickup. And Jaguar Land Rover Holdings., which has a strong
presence in large and luxury SUVs, will sell a plug-in hybrid version of the
Range Rover this summer. The Indian-owned, British brand also has joined forces
with BMW AG to work on electric drive.
At its annual meeting on
June 11, Tesla Inc. CEO Elon Musk said he is pushing hard to get an electric
pickup truck that is capable of work duties but drives like a Porsche. He plans
to show the vehicle this summer.
Should GM decide to move
forward with Hummer, it would need to rebuild the brand’s marketing and retail
strategy. The automaker could sell Hummers in Cadillac or Buick-GMC dealerships
-- for example in a small, brand-dedicated showroom. Previously GM gave
specific franchises to separate Hummer dealers, who were disgruntled when sales
ended. That alone could be a hurdle for greenlighting a resuscitated Hummer
brand, one of the people said.
Whatever happens, GM
won’t be the first to think of an electric Hummer. Schwarzenegger worked with
Kriesel Electric to put a battery and EV motor in his own H1 two years ago --
pioneering a zero-emission version of a vehicle that once went by the tagline
“Like Nothing Else.”
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