GM, Power Companies Join To Make Plug-In Vehicles Work
The automaker wants to be leading the pack when electric cars reach the nation's roads.
By Thomas Claburn
InformationWeek
July 22, 2008 03:10 PM
General Motors on Tuesday said it plans to collaborate with the Electric Power Research Institute, a non-profit research group funded by the electric utility industry, to help bring plug-in electric automobiles to market.
Raising its bet on electric vehicles -- exemplified by the company's commitment to the Chevrolet Volt and Saturn Vue -- General Motors seeks to participate in the development of the technical standards necessary to ensure grid availability and compatibility when plug-in cars reach the nation's roads.
GM, the EPRI, and the participating utility companies will work together to ensure that charging electric vehicles is safe, market plug-in vehicles to the public, and solicit the support of policy makers.
"Together with EPRI and the utility companies, we can transform automotive transportation as we know it, and get our nation and the world past oil dependence -- and heading toward a future that is electric," said Jon Lauckner, GM VP of global program management, in a statement. "This group is taking significant steps toward making electric vehicles a reality and in helping our customers enjoy the tremendous benefits these vehicles will provide."
While Japanese automakers have ....
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