While the industry chatters about electric dreams, General Motors is pouring $4 billion into the steel-and-combustion reality of gas-powered trucks and SUVs—an investment that will retool three U.S. plants to build more of what actually sells—and it’s placing big bets in Michigan.
Starting in 2027, Escalades will roll off the line in Orion Township, Michigan, not Texas, and that same Michigan facility will also add production of GM’s money machines: the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra.
This isn’t a pivot—it’s a tactical pause in GM’s all-electric playbook. Officially, the company still aims to sell only EVs by 2035. Unofficially? ICE is paying the bills, and GM’s moving capacity to meet what it diplomatically calls “continued strong customer demand.”
Originally earmarked for electric truck production, Orion Assembly’s shift to gasoline vehicles is the most visible sign yet of a recalibration. EV losses hit $3.7 billion in the first nine months of last year alone, and though GM insists its electric models are now “variable profit positive,” those variables seem to depend heavily on political tailwinds and consumer incentives that are drying up.
GM’s $4B gasoline-powered earmark was revealed in June, but the plan lacked specifics at the time.
The $7,500 EV tax credit will vanish on September 30. At the same time, President Trump’s rollback of fuel economy penalties makes it cheaper for automakers to keep building gas guzzlers. GM paid over $128 million in fines for missing CAFE standards just a few years ago. Now? That financial headache is gone.
Bottom line: GM isn’t giving up on EVs, but it’s hedging hard. As CEO Mary Barra framed it—somewhat patriotically—GM is committed to “American jobs” and “vehicles customers love.” For now, that means Escalades and Silverados, not Volts and Hummers.
And in a world where consumers are voting with their wallets—and choosing horsepower over kilowatts—GM’s latest moves look less like retreat and more like realism.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
More Top Reads From Oilprice.com: