According to an article on HybridCars.com, GM has officially said that its 2017 Chevy Bolt will not be production limited and is "not a compliance car."
Kevin Kelly, manager of GM's electrification and fuel cell technology said that both GM and LG Chem (supplying the batter packs) have made substantial commitments to the Bolt EV production, and if "as many as 50,000 shoppers happened to place orders in 2017" for the Bolt EV, Chevrolet could fill them.
GM wants to make it clear that the Bolt is not a vehicle purely made to satisfy regulators while not able to market and sell it in volume. GM hasn't made any sales projections.
Kevin Kelly, manager of GM's electrification and fuel cell technology said that both GM and LG Chem (supplying the batter packs) have made substantial commitments to the Bolt EV production, and if "as many as 50,000 shoppers happened to place orders in 2017" for the Bolt EV, Chevrolet could fill them.
“There is nothing constraining us from doing that,” said Kelly when asked how Chevrolet might handle a potential deluge of 50,000 orders that would far surpass conservative analyst projections for the Bolt’s first year of sales.
GM wants to make it clear that the Bolt is not a vehicle purely made to satisfy regulators while not able to market and sell it in volume. GM hasn't made any sales projections.
Kelly’s comment that the Bolt will be nationally marketed and supported and “is not a compliance car” actually echoed that of GM CEO Mary Barra, who introduced the Bolt at CES.
“You can look at the car, and you can buy it just because you love the car as well as the fact that it has a 200-mile electric range,” said Barra in an article by Slate. “This wasn’t a compliance play.”