Tag Archives: Tri Shield

Exclusive: GM China President says automaker could export vehicles from China to US

By Chris Paukert

GM of China executive Bob Socia at 2013 Shanghai Motor Show

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At a press conference on Saturday at the Shanghai Motor Show, General Motors announced plans to further expand its presence in the Chinese market. Among those commitments are plans to build four new plants by the end of 2015, giving the automaker the capacity to produce around five million vehicles a year in the country.

In order to make the most of that expansion, GM is adding 400 dealerships in China this year alone (for a total of 4,200 sales points), and it’s eyeing 5,100 dealers by 2015. Yet not all of that production will stay in ChinaGM is planning to increase exports as well. Officials estimate the company will export somewhere between 100,000 and 130,000 Chinese-built vehicles this year – a record. And it’s gunning for more.

Autoblog asked GM China president Bob Socia (above) if that means the company might eventually export new vehicles built in China to the United States, and he responded:

“It could very well happen. It could very well happen. You know, I’m not sharing any plans with you, but we try to keep open as to what makes sense. And Tim [Lee – GM‘s president of international operations] is the right guy to talk about your manufacturing footprint. If it make sense to tool up a vehicle in one location as opposed to two, from an economic perspective, Tim will say that’s what we should be doing. We’re open to be doing that. There’s no reason why we can’t be exporting to the States, and obviously the States are exporting here.”

Given that the Pan-Asia Technical Automotive Center – GM and Chinese automaker SAIC‘s joint-venture vehicle engineering and design house – is expanding and increasingly calling the shots with Buick, the Tri-Shield brand is arguably the most likely way that Chinese-built vehicles might find their way to the US. GM has sold more Buicks in China than in the States for some time now, and PATAC has been responsible for a growing amount of work on the brand, from taking the lead on styling and engineering for the current LaCrosse to designing showcars like the just-revealed Riviera Concept shown below.

But are there such export plans in place at this time, we asked? “No.”

GM China President says automaker could export vehicles from China to US originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 20 Apr 2013 12:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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From: http://feeds.autoblog.com/~r/weblogsinc/autoblog/~3/-3r-uG_RDgU/

Video: First 2013 Buick Encore TV ad features… dinosaurs

By Chris Paukert

2013 Buick Encore with dinosaur feet in first ad - video screencap

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The whole “SUVs as dinosaurs” trope has become something of a threadbare cliché among auto writers, but that doesn’t mean the wider world of consumers has caught on to the Jurassic nature of our line of thinking. That’s what General Motors appears to be betting on, at least. Just check out Buick’s first television spot for its 2013 Encore, the tiny crossover that is pushing the Tri-Shield into territories unknown while looking to outrun the brand’s reputation as a refuge for elderly clientele.

Set to air this weekend on ESPN during the NCAA college basketball tournament, the ad plays up the Encore’s maneuverability and surprising interior space by setting the baby Buick amongst a herd of lumbering CG dinosaurs created by Tippett Studio, the folks behind Hollywood blockbusters like Jurassic Park, Ted, and the Twilight series of films.

We can’t help but snigger a little – while the Encore is indeed surprisingly roomy, nimble, and composed, our first drive found it to be glacially slow, too… not unlike a certain prehistoric race of animals. Check out the commercial below and judge for yourself.

Continue reading First 2013 Buick Encore TV ad features… dinosaurs

First 2013 Buick Encore TV ad features… dinosaurs originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 14 Mar 2013 19:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog