EV1 Press Information

Sleek red GM EV1

Why is GM taking its successful electric vehicle off the road and away from drivers willing to pay GM to keep driving it?

The General Motors (GM) EV1 is a high-performance zero-emission vehicle powered purely by electricity. Launched in 1997, the EV1 can travel from 70 to 140 miles at speeds reaching 80 MPH on a single charge. Despite creating an excellent vehicle, GM deliberately failed to promote it and has misrepresented the market response to regulators and the press in its battle against the California Air Resources Board's clean-car regulations.

Despite hundreds of enthusiastic drivers who now lease the car and hundreds more waiting to pay to drive the EV1 (of which approximately 1150 were produced), on February 7, 2002, GM Advanced Technology Vehicles brand manager Ken Stewart notified drivers that GM will remove the cars from the road, contrary to a statement two months earlier that GM would not be "taking cars off the road from customers" [4]. Drivers fear these working cars will be destroyed, because GM has crushed other functional electric cars in the past.

On June 28, 2002, GM refused to deposit checks totaling more than $22,000 from 58 drivers wanting to extend their leases. On August 14, 2002, GM announced it would meet California emissions regulations by giving away thousands of golf cart-like vehicles, incapable of driving in regular traffic. Larry Burns, GM vice president of research, development, and planning, stated: "Customers don't want to buy electric vehicles" [3], despite research [5] and petitions that show that consumers do, in fact, want electric cars. Because of GM's duplicity, the Natural Resource Defense Council and Production Electric Vehicle Drivers Coalition have filed to intervene in car dealers' federal suit against the clean-car regulations.

For more information, read our white paper. To speak with a driver or to drive an EV1, contact Ellen Spertus (ev1@spertus.com) or Greg Hanssen (714-350-2228, greg@pevdc.org). Drivers are available in the Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Sacramento, Phoenix, Tucson, and Atlanta areas.

Documents

Links

Articles

  1. Adams, Noel.  Why is GM Crushing Their EV-1s?  Electrifying Times, December 2, 2001.
  2. Brown, Janelle.  Batteries Included: Is the electric car a high-tech toy -- or the savior of the planet?  Salon, June 17, 1998.
  3. Ellis, Michael. GM to Give Away Thousands of Electric Vehicles. Reuters, August 14, 2002. [GM "will give away thousands of golf cart-like electric vehicles to comply with California regulations forcing automakers to sell pollution-free vehicles.]
  4. "GM: Hybrids, Fuel Cells, and the Lawyers." Convention and Tradeshow News, December 12, 2001, p. 12.
  5. Green Car Institute.  Poll of 900 California New Car Buyers Shows Strong Demand for Reasonably Priced Electric Vehicles.  September 7, 2000.
  6. Moore, Bill.  Do 10 Million Californians Want EVs? An Interview with Michael Coates.  EV World, 2000.
  7. Moore, Bill.  California Injunction Blues.  EV World, July 6, 2002.
  8. Vasilash, Gary S.  Charged Up! What's Behind GM's Electric Vehicle Strategy.  Automotive Design and Production, July 1997.
  9. Wald, Matthew L.  "Expecting a Fizzle, G.M. Puts Electric Car to Test" (cover story).  New York Times, January 28, 1994.  [Discusses GM's hope that their electric car rollout will fail.]

Last modified: August 21, 2004