The Detroit News
Cadillac Set to Debut First All-Electric Vehicle

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DETROIT 鈥 Cadillac is turning to its next chapter as an electric-vehicle brand with the debut of the 2022 Cadillac Lyriq crossover.
The battery-powered Lyriq, Cadillac鈥檚 first all-electric vehicle, will debut online Aug. 6. Although the Lyriq is not expected to hit showrooms until sometime in 2022, it marks the beginning of Cadillac鈥檚 dive into electrics. General Motors Co.鈥檚 stated goal is to sell more Cadillacs with rechargeable batteries than gas tanks by 2030.
Some industry observers see it as a chance for Cadillac to finally move ahead of foreign luxury-makers. Others question whether it鈥檚 realistic in a time when only a small percentage of buyers shop electrics.
鈥淚t鈥檚 no secret they want to elevate their brand, they want to compete with the European luxury automakers, and it seems like they鈥檝e tried various avenues like performance,鈥 said Jessica Caldwell, executive director of insights for market researcher Edmunds. 鈥淪o I wonder if this is one of those ways that they want to differentiate themselves, but it鈥檚 not necessarily going to materialize into anything that is long-lasting.鈥

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Steve Carlisle, senior vice president and president of Cadillac 鈥 and soon to become executive vice president and president of North America 鈥 told reporters in December that by 2030, he expects 鈥渢o see the internal combustion fade away and the electric start to dominate. We will be in a position to be 100% electric by the latter part of the decade.鈥
Automotive industry analyst Karl Brauer is wary of long-term commitments like Carlisle鈥檚: 鈥淏ecause nobody is going to look back and say, 鈥楬e was wrong, they鈥檙e not all electric.鈥 In other words, what鈥檚 he got to lose by making that prediction?鈥
Cadillac鈥檚 plan hasn鈥檛 changed since December, despite a two-month shutdown of plants due to the pandemic that drove the automaker to an $800 million loss in the second quarter. GM says it鈥檚 still pushing forward on its aggressive EV plans, Lyriq included. The automaker aims to have 20 electric nameplates globally by 2023 and will spend $20 billion on electric and autonomous vehicle production through 2025.
GM picked Cadillac as the brand to lead its transition to EVs. Cadillac first teased images of the Lyriq in spring 2019. Though GM has been secretive on details, it has confirmed the electric crossover will have a 33-inch display screen and will be fitted with Super Cruise, GM鈥檚 advanced driver-assist technology.
The Lyriq will be powered by GM鈥檚 new Ultium battery, which has energy options ranging from 50 to 200 kWh. The automaker estimates the batteries will be able to push some vehicles to 400 miles or more on a single charge.

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The Aug. 6 debut 鈥渁bsolutely marks the beginning of a new chapter for Cadillac,鈥 said Rory Harvey, vice president of Cadillac North America sales, service and marketing, and next global boss of the brand.
鈥淚f you go back in time, there will have been a number of sort of important chapters written in Cadillac history ... there鈥檚 no doubt this is absolutely a pivotal moment,鈥 he said.
Cadillac in recent decades has struggled to keep up with European competitors like Mercedes-Benz and BMW. Its performance V-series was aimed at BMW. It also began using alphanumeric names like the competition. With the Lyriq, it鈥檚 ditching those jumbles of letters and numbers.
But European luxury-makers aren鈥檛 sitting still either. BMW last week said it will build a fully electric 5-series as part of a sweeping remake of the brand.
Electric vehicles still make up only a small percentage of sales. Hybrids and fully electric vehicles together accounted for just over 4% of total sales in 2019, according to Edmunds, with all-electric models accounting for a third of those sold. But a big proportion of battery-only sales were luxury models 鈥 more than 80%.
Cadillac鈥檚 most formidable competitor in the luxury EV segment is not a European brand. It鈥檚 Silicon Valley鈥檚 Tesla, which remains the EV leader.
Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, Tesla still was able to sell 90,650 EVs in April through June. More than 10,000 of them were the $70,000-plus Model S or Model X. Compare that to Audi鈥檚 e-tron SUV, which managed only 1,161 sales in that time period.
Cadillac dealers say they鈥檙e cautiously excited about what鈥檚 coming down the road.
Edward J. Pobur, executive manager at Cadillac of Novi, has been selling cars 鈥 mostly Cadillacs 鈥 for 35 years. He has some qualms about the brand going mostly electric, but he knows 鈥渢hat鈥檚 the way the current business is going.鈥
鈥淚f we go into a world that they don鈥檛 want to be in, then we lose customers,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat worries me if you throw all your eggs into one basket. I think it鈥檚 the right way to go. I don鈥檛 know if it鈥檚 100% of the right way to go.鈥
Cadillac in the past has offered some hybrids, including the discontinued ELR. But that鈥檚 not what the brand has been known for.
鈥淭he Lyriq is going to bring a whole new set of customers to our showroom,鈥 said Michael Walls, general sales manager at LaFontaine Cadillac Buick GMC in Highland Township. 鈥淚 believe Cadillac鈥檚 innovation and their EV technology is going to be right up there with the rest of them.鈥
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