| Over 33,000 Buyers Signed Up for GM Electric Car
US: August 14, 2008
DETROIT - In a bid to show the demand for the upcoming all-electric
Chevrolet Volt, a proponent of the car has released details of an unofficial
waiting list for the vehicle with over 33,000 prospective buyers.
Lyle Dennis, a New York neurologist who has emerged as a prominent
enthusiast for the battery-powered car from General Motors Corp, has been
assembling a list of prospective Volt buyers for over a year through his Web
site GM-Volt.com.
On Tuesday, Dennis released details gleaned from the list showing that
33,411 people had signed up to show their intent to buy a Volt when the
rechargeable car is released in 2010.
The list shows the highest number of potential Volt buyers in California,
Texas, Florida and Michigan. It also includes potential buyers from 46
countries outside the United States.
The average price buyers were willing to pay for the car was US$31,261 --
substantially less than the US$40,000 GM has said it will cost to build the
first-generation of the car equipped with a massive lithium-ion battery
pack.
GM has been racing to finish development of the Volt in time for the planned
launch as the centerpiece of its effort to break a costly association with
gas-guzzling vehicles at a time when truck sales are tumbling and gas prices
remain high.
Like most automakers, GM typically keeps its vehicle development programs
under tight wraps and shuns publicity.
But with the Volt, GM has taken the opposite approach, actively consulting
enthusiasts like Dennis and featuring the concept version of the Volt in
high-profile advertising, including a television spot broadcast during the
Olympics.
Dennis, who organized a meeting between enthusiasts called the "Volt Nation"
and GM executives at the New York Auto Show earlier this year, said he was
motivated by a desire to show the Detroit-based automaker that the Volt
would have a wide base of buyers from the start.
"If everyone who wanted a Volt could get one, that would be the dream," said
Dennis.
GM, which does not expect to make money on the first-generation of the Volt,
has said it will ramp up output slowly when production of the plug-in hybrid
starts at a Hamtramck, Michigan plant.
A GM spokesman said that the automaker expected an initial shortage for the
Volt, similar to the shortages for other hot-selling recent models.
"I don't know if there is any other vehicle or any other technology that has
generated this kind of interest because of the state of the market and gas
prices," said GM spokesman Dave Darovitz. "We know the demand is going to be
there."
Darovitz declined to discuss pricing for the Volt
GM showed off a concept version of the Volt in January 2007 but has retooled
the look of the vehicle significantly since then, in part in order to
improve its aerodynamics, representatives of the automaker have said.
GM is designing the Volt to run for 40 miles (64 km) on a lithium-ion
battery pack that can be recharged at a standard outlet. The Volt will also
capture energy from braking, like a traditional hybrid, and feature an
on-board engine that will be used to send power to the battery on longer
trips.
GM is racing Toyota Motor Corp to bring the first mass-market, plug-in car
to the marketplace. (Editing by Phil Berlowitz)
Story by Kevin Krolicki
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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