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Ode to Chevy Volt: the Car that Started as Green Electroshock Therapy Rightfully Ends with Barely a Spark

OPINION ANALYSIS: America’s first plug in hybrid, a segment opening PHEV was put to death recently, the Chevrolet Volt was a cutting edge trailblazing vehicle that bridged the gap between siphoning off gas and waiting for battery technology to improve before pushing on to an all electric car world. So cancelling it seems counterintuitive. It is not. Actually Volt was a great accidental/incidental transition vehicle who’s time came and was way gone.
Posted: December 3, 2018 - 8:00AM
Author: Al Castro

As my colleague John Goreham superbly reported, with the sudden out of nowhere update of General Motors plans to fastrack the end of gasoline vehicle production and save money in the process by closing a half dozen plants and layoff 14,000 workers, most people would think cancellation of Chevy Volt is counterintuitive.

The time was 2007 and at the time while General Motors was on a free-fall money burn with a race against time toward their 2009 bankruptcy, it was becoming quite clear that the importance of beating Toyota and Prius was about game changing the strategy with Tesla and Model S that was readying mass production at the time, to make a GM electric car more about all electric and not transitional hybrid.

Car Mega Guru Bob Lutz of the Golden 1960’s Car Era, the days of pony, muscle, Pontiac, horsepower, and be damned of bean counters and let’s just do this! fame, was taken on to the GM board as vice chair by CEO Rick Wagoner, and his job was to clean up the 1980’s and 90’s reputation of lackluster GM design and engineering. Less front wheel drive and plasticky cheap interiors particularly in Cadillacs. Lutz was more about the brand and the bigger picture.

Engineers of the Voltec platform came to him with the inevitable problem engineers tried to work around but couldn’t resolve the way Tesla was going about doing it. You see, Tesla could afford to fit a tray of expensive lithium ion batteries used for cell phones on an upscale $100,000 car at the manufacturing scale they were planning on doing, but GM just wasn’t ready to mass market lithium ion the way they wanted to. Their supply chain and economies of scale and a tight budget prevented them from doing so. Otherwise they could swat Tesla like a bug.

Ok give me some options Lutz told them. This is where the PHEV and the Chevy Volt was born. This not not what GM exactly wanted, but until they found a way to make lith ion cheaper, it would have to do. He signed off but made it clear, this car will eventually be a Tesla killer, not a Prius killer.

Where did that go wrong?

The PHEV Hybrid: I Promise to Burn Gas Only When I Have to:

That is the conundrum of the Chevrolet Volt, be damned its specifics, it was a revolutionary car. Even President Obama avowed to get one once out of office to drive to his post presidential work every day. I don’t think he realized how his life would dramatically change even after a post-presidency to never have to drive again since the first time he was elected, and I don’t think General Motors realized what trajectory Volt would take to last so long.

But it’s passing is a game changer, so let’s look back at 10 years of Volt, where I stand in all this so you can assess my bias, and the advantages and disadvantages of PHEVs, and what happens now moving forward:

I’m famously known to be not necessarily anti-PHEV but more on the side of BEV advocacy. Think about this: car electrification’s ultimate goal is about ZERO EMISSIONS: let’s get all of the small fireplaces to put out their fires first, while we find ways to convert the bigger sourced fires to renewable energy, the conventional wisdom goes.

Hybrids are about LOW EMISSIONS, NOT ZERO. If that’s the case then what’s the point of a hybrid, especially now? We’ll continue to have gas vehicles that instead of polluting all the time, they instead will be polluting when you run out of range. PHEV owners seem to forget that equation, to implicitly allow us to trust them with an ungiven promise they’ll never use their gas part ever. PHEV owners I love you to death I do, but that’s not your decision to make, it never was and it never will. Why? Let’s take a look at the term “transition vehicle,” and what it could mean to anyone and why we need to act decisively on hybrids NOW.

“Transition vehicle” is a fluid term. For first adopters that means the first on their block with the latest vehicle technology that will cut emissions into the environment. And when something better comes along that means trading it in for something even better. But for other economic groups not so blessed with funds to undertake a noble endeavor, “transition vehicles” means something else much different.

Have any of you stark defenders of your Volts and ELR’s ever thought what happens to them when they’re still serviceable, but when you’re done with them? Like an old Escalade or a Mercedes or an Electra 225, they get passed down to the next economic group less fortunate than the original owner, and with more important priorities than saving the planet.

Say, like a one salary single mom who picks up your Volt at a steal price at a used car lot that’ll get her to her job at Home Depot so she can feed her fatherless kid. Tell me, hypothetically, if the battery portion stops working and she can still use the gas part to get to work, what priority will she place in getting the electrical part fixed? Are you folks finally starting to see the bigger picture? That’s her “transition vehicle.”

This is why both the UK and the European Union are banning PHEV sales by the year 2040, as they are already doing with fossil cars. But it seems even with the recent luxury car proliferation of them, with the cancellation of Volt, we may already be on an express track to their extinction much sooner. Trust me, if it was easy for GM to get rid of Volt, it’ll be just as easy for Lincoln to cancel their new PHEV Aviator they’re giving all the hoot about recently, as it was easy as it was for them to cancel their iconic halo, the storied Lincoln Continental.

Beside the fact that establishments public and private are taking it upon themselves to ban them on their own, bigger car companies are starting to realize they can make BEVs more cheaper and faster than gas ones. That’s what Project Polaris at VW Group is all about.

As all kinds of electric vehicles proliferate the landscape across the globe, there will come a time when there will be an abundance of them and soon. And there are so many places where we can park our electric cars with preferential treatment, take preferential status or rates when using HOV or toll roads, and wait for a turn to use any kind of public charging station. Trust me, as we go along PHEVs will become an afterthought to have less and eventually no priority. In some places like California, EVs have reached a critical mass, that the state and the people and communities that lie within it must decide either who or what kind of EV can get better, closer, preferential, or even access to at all to any kind of services, public, perhaps in a few cases, private.

My Bias and Premise: Folks I’m not an Ideologue, Far From It!

I do not profess to be a electric vehicle purist, whatever that is. As the police officer I was intensively trained to be once at young adulthood barely passed teenaged years, if anything and above all else, I am a pragmatist. I believe you hope for the best, prepare for the worse, believe what’s in your heart, stick to what you know, but try to base decisions based on facts, not necessarily what you think might work for you, most especially when a decision is about leadership, which encompassed over half of my previous career, you make sure your decision is for the good of the many as opposed to just the few.

Pragmatists must stand by the premise that anything is possible, the unexplainable too, and with that premise, all options are on the table. But if important decisions have to made they must be based on facts, not even necessarily what you or I may believe, or what may be based on personal experience.

My position is not whether a pure electric vehicle makes more sense than a hybrid one. My position is that the ultimate goal of this whole electric thing was to get every vehicle on the road to become fully electric ASAP.

We are at the state of an interplanetary emergency. This is something I can relate to and understand. I served during the September 11th crisis. Our planet is dying. Life as we know it is dramatically changing exponentially on the planet. There is a climate crisis and we have to orderly and methodically find solutions. Even if you disagree to proudly be a climate denier, you cannot deny whatever is causing this and something is going on, to get that part of your head out of the sand, that there are things we can do to abate it, lessen it, and/or make it as manageable as we can. And we have a moral obligation to our children and theirs, and to the animals and living things that have an equal right to be here as we do, to try. And as leaders of the free world we Americans are, even more so.

FOLKS READ THIS CAREFULLY: there is a reason why we are all here talking about electric cars, and the Electric Car Revolution. It isn’t because of Volt. It is because of Tesla. We are here because of Tesla. What car or car brand do you think every other car board of directors or shareholders meeting around the globe obsess about when they convene a meeting?

THERE IS A REASON WHY TESLA DOES NOT MAKE HYBRIDS. That is the whole point of this exercise. The goal is ZERO not LOW EMISSIONS.

We don’t need the PHEV anymore. Some of you may argue otherwise, so let me put it in these terms you may understand. If by fiat or law PHEVs were taken away, we can easily at this point go on without put them as opposed to not having BEVs under the same circumstances, would worsen our situation. If we can do only so much better with them while here, that they can also harm us as well, then we probably can do without them if we had to. We can continue on without it them. The bottom line is that they are still gas cars, and there will come a time with them, you’ll run out of range. And when you do they revert back to gas. That’s not helping matters.

The premise was back in 2008 when the Chevy Volt was born, the batteries at the time weren’t as good, so the engineers needed a transition platform so that when the technology improved for the vehicle the batteries were intended for, they can take vehicle that created the segment, that’s the Chevy Volt, and can then move on to the next generation so we won’t need the hybrid platform anymore, to use a full battery one. That was supposed to be the Chevy Bolt. Well, here we are over 10 years later and Volt is still here.

Bob Lutz, the Vice Chair of GM at the time made it clear, as Volt was under development that it was going to be a Tesla competitor eventually, not a Prius one, and emphasized this understanding when he signed off on the birth of a new temporary electric vehicle segment. Volt was supposed to become Bolt. Lithium ion has improved, in fact we’ve moved on since to solid state batteries. The PHEVs are still here, the technology ten years old and older, and they are now proliferating exponentially.

A plug in hybrid does not compete with a Tesla. Because the segment has yet to be closed out, the only thing that a PHEV really competes with, is with itself: other PHEVs. The whole point to this entire exercise some of us forget and perhaps at times dangerously so, some who have no clue of the history behind this, that this whole electric car thing that started this all, was all about Tesla, nothing else but Tesla. Tesla is a BEV. It wasn’t about any PHEV.

The goal is ZERO EMISSIONS, NOT LOW. There are other factors to consider according to EVAdoption.com http://evadoption.com/ev-statistics-of-the-week-phevs-by-the-numbers/:

Following is a look at PHEVs by the numbers as of December 23, 2017:

Current Available Models:

▪ There are 26 plug-in electric hybrid vehicles available in the US.
▪ BMW offers five PHEVs, Mercedes-Benz and Volvo each have three available PHEV models, followed by Ford, GM and Porsche with two each.
Electric-Only Range:
▪ Average battery-only range is 22.8 miles
▪ Median range is 21.0 miles.
Average Price:
▪ Average base price is $55,391 and median price is $44,875
▪ Chevrolet Volt has the highest battery-only range at 53 miles
▪ Chevrolet Volt also has the lowest cost per mile of range at $643
▪ Mercedes C350e has the least battery-only range at a paltry 11 miles. While at 15 miles of range and a base price of $143,400, BMW’s i8 sports car has the honor of the highest cost per mile of range at $9,560.
Future PHEVs:
▪ About 25% of the announced future EVs are expected to be PHEVs. (see the list)

On average, Americans drive 29.2 miles per day, making two trips with an average total duration of 46 minutes, according to a 2015 study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety and the Urban Institute. The study also found that college graduates drove an average of 37.2 miles. With an average 21 mile range a PHEV gives, something’s got to give. The car is going to eventually and at times run out of range. And when it does it reverts to gas. And the goal is zero emissions. So what’s the point if that’s the case?

“BEV Elitism:” Fancy That!

I was recently accused ridiculously of “BEV Elitism,” in the comments section of this article, whatever that is. I bursted out into genuine laughter to almost fall out of my chair at my desk when I read that. This is how I know people don’t know me, and are ridiculously ignorant of car knowledge or history to not understand how the electric car revolution was born and is evolving, that PHEV hybrids were not put here solely on purpose, and people have no idea what the hell they’re talking about, which actually makes them dangerous.

This is also how I know they know little about cars except when they need one, to go car shopping to see options, and see a PHEV as a good compromise vehicle without looking at the bigger picture and without doing further research.

Well, their PHEV works for them, they tell me. And I say, well good for you! But my job as a Car journalist is to look out for everybody, not just YOU, and it isn’t all about YOU.

Car dealers are now realizing this, to now put pressure on manufacturers to hold off on BEVs and prolong the transition so they can stretch the endangered dealer based business model of selling gasoline cars. But the Volt cancellation is a game changer, and while manufacturers want to help out their base like any politician would looking to get re-elected, the economy almost always sometimes gets in the way. And supply chains are telling them: pick us or the other, but if you’re that rich to waste money, you can’t have both kinds of chains.

PHEVs: The Facts

Getting back to Madam “BEV Elitetism,” I could conjecture what the reader was trying to tell me, for her to miss the entire point and the history of PHEVs. And for me, the most silliest thing I ever heard, for the reader to not even realize these facts about PHEVs:

1. PHEVs are transition vehicles. Bob Lutz, vice chair of GM back in 2008 created the segment starting with Volt. Lithium batteries left much to be desired back then. The idea was that whatever Volt was, they did not want it to become a Prius competitor. The goal was for the next generation Volt, which is Bolt, to become a Tesla competitor.
2. PHEVs still use gas. They have low ranges that go back to being gas vehicles. No matter what the trip, there a good chance you’ll run out of range to go back to gas. On average Americans drive a bit further than a charging cycle of a PHEV. It’s just a matter of time.
3. Plug hybrids are tougher on lith ion batteries than BEVs are on theirs: That paltry range means a shorter life cycle for PHEV batteries and if long term ownership, greater cost in replacement. I’m being generous when I say a daily 50 mile rechargeable range takes it toll on batteries. Anything less is brutal. You one of those complaining about how the batteries are crap as they age as an excuse not to want to buy an electric car? Better not buy a PHEV!
4. Longer trips mean your gas engine is probably going to do all the work. So much for going green!
5. PHEVs are more inefficient than a BEV, than any other electric car. Remember something that’s always overlooked: your PHEV is always inefficient because it lugging around that several hundred pound engine that could be weight added more efficiently to an already heavy battery tray. Make up your mind what it is you really want.
6. You worried about batteries exploding, then why the hell would you want to add gasoline to that flammable scenario? Are you crazy? Make up your minds which kind you really want, one or the other, not both then!
7. If you plan to keep your Volt or Aviator or whatever long haul remember this: today’s 50 mile range is tomorrow’s 35-45 mile range and less, and battery replacement time will come sooner than it would have if you went balls to the wall with batteries instead.

Reasons Pro and Refuted:

Here’s a competing colleague’s reasons FOR getting a PHEV:
1. PHEV owners become more knowledgeable about the various types of chargers, terminology, locations of EV chargers, charging etiquette, and best practices.
2. Owners learn how to plan and manage their trips around available battery range and reduce or eliminate range anxiety.
3. Owners may install a charger at their home (or get one installed at their apartment). An existing charger at home is one less hurdle for a consumer to jump to a BEV.
4. Owners get first-hand experience with the advantages of EVs when their PHEVs are in battery mode. These include increased torque, acceleration, smoothness, and the quietness of the electric motor. They also get to enjoy fewer trips to gas stations.
5. Their purchase of an EV, even if only a PHEV with a range of 20 miles, sends a powerful signal to auto salespeople, dealer management, auto company executives, and the overall industry and marketplace that more consumers are comfortable buying plug-in cars.

Well you can do all those above things with a BEV and have a longer range in which to do them. For 6: if you buy a PHEV you’re actually sending a message to the salesman you’re willing to buy the last kind of vehicle that fits into the dealers old business model of gas cars. A car type that when it breaks down will enable the dealer to make an even bigger profit than he will with your all electric because your PHEV is still a gas car. Watch closely when the lease is over or when it’s time to trade: what’s the first kind of vehicle he pushes on you? Is it a another hybrid? Why is that? How insisting is he with it? How many years of hybrids will you need until you feel comfortable buying a full electric?

Final Thought and Like Volt, THE END:

That’s my point about PHEVs. The charging dynamic is never going to be like gassing a car. Get out your public charging map app and dive in. The PHEV is now beginning it’s quick death with the end of Chevy Volt. It actually was never wholly intended to exist. Now it’s gone. Trust me, if GM thought it was such a valuable vehicle for them they would have went out of their way to keep it. They didn’t.

And soon so will the same fate face the battery electric plugin hybrid. Car companies, at least the bigger ones, are starting to realize they can make all electric cars more cheaply and faster than gasoline ones. Hybrids are cheaper to make to cut costs right now, watch how quickly that changes as these companies are now undergoing supply chain changes.

And if the Europeans and Brits have put a timeline on them as much as we Americans are becoming addicted to them ironically like cigarettes, economies dictate we too will have no choice but to let them go as well. And the sooner the better.

So get ready. Take a deep breath. Now dive into that cold water of BEVs and public charging. Wade a little. You’ll get used to the conditions. Take it in, it ain’t all that bad! Welcome to a new dynamic of American driving.

What do you think of Al’s crazy thinking? Let us know below! Happy hybrid plugging!

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