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GM Debuts Midsize Electric Delivery Van With Verizon as Customer

GM Debuts Midsize Electric Delivery Van With Verizon as Customer

General Motors Co.’s electric van unit plans to build a new midsized cargo hauler called the EV410, and has signed up Verizon Communications Inc. as the first buyer, the company said Tuesday.

GM announced the formation of BrightDrop, a wholly owned subsidiary that supplies battery-powered vans and offers fleet-management services, in January. Since then, the automaker has been gearing up to produce its larger electric van, the EV600, with the first 500 slated to go to FedEx Corp. The company said it’s on track to deliver those vans to FedEx by the end of the year.

GM Debuts Midsize Electric Delivery Van With Verizon as Customer

BrightDrop Chief Executive Officer Travis Katz has told investors that electric delivery vans will be a $30 billion market by 2025. GM is trying to capitalize on the boom in e-commerce that has sparked demand for delivery vehicles from the likes of Amazon.com Inc., FedEx, and United Parcel Service Inc. BrightDrop is also part of GM’s strategy to accelerate development and deployment of its electric powertrains, the parts -- including the motors -- that make a vehicle move.

Owners of commercial fleets will be early adopters of battery-powered vehicles because they’re more willing to pay the higher upfront price of an EV in order to save on fuel and maintenance costs over time, according to BloombergNEF.

“We expect to see commercial fleets convert to electrification much faster than other segments,” Katz said on a call with reporters. “They’re really doing the math and they understand the economics.”

GM Debuts Midsize Electric Delivery Van With Verizon as Customer

Verizon will use the EV410 for its service and maintenance fleets. Both the EV600 and EV410 offer 250 miles of range before they need a recharge, Katz said. GM isn’t disclosing the price of the vans or the number of vehicles Verizon is buying.

GM is far from the only company targeting last-mile delivery. Ford Motor Co., the largest commercial-vehicle maker in the U.S., has said it will start selling its E-Transit van later this year that will go 126 miles on a charge. Amazon-backed Rivian Automotive Inc. is building an electric van for the retail giant, and a slew of other startups are targeting the market, as well.

About a third of the world’s 375 million commercial vehicles will be electric by 2050, compared with just 0.2% in 2020, according to BloombergNEF forecasts. They’ll make up about 10% of U.S. fleets by 2030.

GM is fast-tracking development of the EV600 by setting up low-volume production at a supplier’s facility, said Tushar Porwal, BrightDrop’s head of manufacturing.

Once the manufacturing bugs are worked out, GM will transfer equipment to its plant in Ingersoll, Canada, which will start full-scale production of the EV600 in November 2022. The EV410 will start production in the fall of 2023.

GM Debuts Midsize Electric Delivery Van With Verizon as Customer

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.