- Fully electric vehicles will see a faster transition than hybrids, a
General Motors executive said during a panel with Business Insider. - "I think we'll see a faster transition to pure EV's," GM chief sustainability officer Dane Parker said.
- GM has previously pledged to make at least 20 electric vehicles by 2023.
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As automakers and drivers move toward an sustainable future, we can expect fully electric vehicles to see a faster transition than hybrids, Dane Parker, General Motors' chief sustainability officer, said during Business Insider's IGNITION: Transportation virtual live event.
"I think we'll see a faster transition to pure EVs," he said in an panel with Business Insider's Alex Davies. "And as the price curve continues to improve for batteries in the next two to three years, that will help." Parker predicted that 2025 will mark an inflection point where electrics become affordable and available enough to take off: "I think we'll start to see accelerations after that."
Hybrids are more complex to engineer, Parker said, since they have to incorporate both battery-electric technology and a combustion engine. Those complexities, coupled with the advent of better batteries, will drive investments into "pure" battery electric vehicles, he said.
Previous moves by GM certainly suggest a preference for going all-electric. The automaker announced it would discontinue its Volt hybrid in 2018 and has announced that it will release 20 fully electric vehicles by 2023.
In his panel with Business Insider, Parker said that the automaker could sell a million
Watch the rest of the Parker's panel, part of Business Insider's IGNITION: