It Sure Sounds Like GM Will Build Electric Coupes

General Motors' bidirectional charging announcement hid an easter egg

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Yesterday, General Motors announced bidirectional charging — the ability to send power both to and from an EV’s battery — across its entire Ultium EV lineup. But the announcement video, in its list of vehicles types that will receive V2H charging, included a curious item: Ultium-based coupes.

So far, Ultium has been reserved for big vehicles: Hummers, Lyriqs, Escalade IQs, the kinds of transportation that can roll over a child, cyclist, or child cyclist without batting an eye. GM has talked about using the architecture to revive the Bolt, but it hasn’t deigned to shrink the design further — the Corvette E-Ray, GM’s only electrified coupe, doesn’t use Ultium batteries.

GM Expands Access to Vehicle-to-Home Tech | Electric Vehicles | General Motors

The specific mention of an Ultium coupe, then, can’t mean that Corvette. It must mean something else — perhaps an abandoned name and design, a two-door 2+2 that’s more practical than the ‘Vette, a car too cool for this world. That’s right: GM is bringing back an electrified Buick Avista.

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Okay, yeah, fine, it’s probably the Camaro. When killing off the car’s sixth generation, Chevy even announced that it wasn’t the end for the nameplate — just that iteration of the car. Still, given the company’s approach of starting Ultium off in the ritziest, highest-dollar models, it may be some time yet before the humble Camaro shows up as an EV.

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Will GM begin with an electric Cadillac flagship coupe? It would certainly be an interesting way to update the V line, and to show off the brand’s performance chops in the electric era. Then, once the early adopters have had their six-figure payments extracted, the platform could trickle down to Chevy, where it could wear a Camaro badge.

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This is all speculation, of course, but it seems viable. More viable than a production-ready Avista, anyway. But, if you’re reading this and you work at GM, just at least consider the Buick. Please?