GM is transforming into more than an electric car company, Joann Muller reports. It's becoming a diversified energy company — selling battery technology and energy management services to power not just cars, but also trains, boats, commercial equipment and buildings.
Why it matters: Parlaying its battery and fuel cell expertise into other uses is a natural extension for GM, which aims to double annual revenue to $280 billion by 2030.
What's happening: The automaker is creating a new business unit, GM Energy, that will sell energy storage and management services to residential and commercial customers.
Details: In one GM Energy initiative, the automaker is partnering with SunPower, a leading solar energy company, to sell a home energy system that will integrate EVs, solar panels and energy storage.
The big picture: It's all part of GM's broader strategy to build an EV ecosystem — batteries, charging, connectivity and energy management — that it can supply to other industries as well.
What they're saying: "This is a business model that is right in front of us," says GM vice president Travis Hester, who leads the company's EV growth initiatives.
Between the lines: GM's new unit is essentially selling energy security at a time when the grid seems increasingly unstable.
Of note: Hester says GM's network of dealers will help market the company's home energy systems when they sell EVs, potentially earning commissions.
The bottom line: Everything is going electric, and GM wants to power it all.