California DMV registration

GM Creates Specialized Autonomous Vehicle, EV Team

Doug Parks

The Detroit Bureau

General Motors is realigning critical areas of its business to create, effective Feb. 1, a dedicated Autonomous and Technology Vehicle Development Team.

GM said in an internal announcement the combined team will focus on accelerating the company’s technical capabilities and create the future direction of GM vehicle programs in the autonomous and technologically advanced vehicle space.

Doug Parks, who had been Vice President, Global Product Programs, is leading the new effort as Vice President, Autonomous Technology and Vehicle Execution. According to GM, the group is responsible for “creating and executing autonomously driven vehicles in addition to advanced technology vehicle programs, including hybrids, battery-electric and fuel-cell vehicles.”

“Parks and his team will be the single point accountable for all critical technologies and total vehicle solutions in the areas of electrical architecture, controls and software, system and safety integration, development and validation, sourcing and execution,” the company said in a statement.

Parks will report directly to Mark Reuss, GM vice president of global product development, purchasing and supply chain. The focus on advanced vehicle technologies means additional responsibilities for other GM executives as well.

Pam Fletcher, executive chief engineer, Global Electric Vehicles, will add the Autonomous Chevrolet Volt Campus Fleet to her responsibilities. She also will lead a team focused on strategic planning and competitive assessments within the autonomous and electric vehicle space.

Sheri Hickok, chief engineer, Next Generation Light Duty Pick-Up, was appointed Executive Chief Engineer, Autonomous JVs and Fleet Execution. She will lead the execution teams of autonomous fleets and the strategy and development of related key partnerships and joint ventures.

Andrew Farah, chief engineer, Global Electrified Vehicles, was promoted to Chief Technology Architect, Autonomous Systems. Farah will lead the technical activities of the teams empowered to create hardware, software and controls mechanisms which support autonomous vehicles.  In addition, he will lead the Global Product Development teams focus on technologies required for autonomous vehicle operations.

Scott Miller, director, Global C02 Strategy, Energy, Mass and Aerodynamics, was appointed Director, Autonomous Vehicle Integration. He will be the technical director for Autonomous feature and controls integration, vehicle and feature validation, and vehicle development teams.

Expanding the group focusing on this level of autonomy and technology shouldn’t be a surprise. GM has been pushing its technological prowess for the past several years. The latest effort is the company’s introduction of the new Chevy Bolt.

The EV may be the first viable, mainstream affordable vehicle built in high volumes. Expected to get 200 miles on a full charge, the Bolt is expected to cost $35,000 after government tax breaks. The vehicle mitigates two of the biggest problems EVs have faced: limited range and cost.

Read more of the original article in The Detroit Bureau.

The post GM Creates Specialized Autonomous Vehicle, EV Team appeared first on Fleet Management Weekly.


from Fleet Management Weekly http://ift.tt/1NK9lkK

CA Vehicle registration service


Sourced by Quik DMV - CADMV fleet registration services. Renew your registration online in only 10 minutes. No DMV visits, no lines, no phone mazes, and no appointments needed. Visit Quik, Click, Pay & Print your registration from home or any local print shop.
SHARE

About Unknown

    Blogger Comment
    Facebook Comment

0 comments:

Post a Comment

-

Copyright © 2012 · Designed by studiopress · Converted by blogtipsntricks
Powered by Blogger.