General Motors is reportedly planning an architecture shift for its entry-level luxury electric vehicle.
According to a report from Reuters, the next-generation Cadillac Optiq will abandon GM's domestic North American Ultium hardware. Instead, the Detroit automaker allegedly intends to migrate the compact luxury crossover onto an advanced EV platform engineered entirely in China.
According to an unnamed source, the upcoming next-gen Optiq will reportedly adopt the "Xiao Yao" architecture, a sophisticated high-voltage platform developed at the SAIC-GM PATAC (Pan Asia Technical Automotive Center) engineering facility in Shanghai. If true, it would grant the regional Chinese engineering team an unprecedented level of autonomy over the technical direction of a new global vehicle program.
The Xiao Yao architecture—the name is a Daoist term meaning "freedom from burdens"— already underpins the Buick Electra E7, which uses a high-speed 900-volt electrical system to enable rapid recharging times. The platform can also reportedly support a plug-in hybrid powertrain, a glaring hole in GM's current North American product repertoire.
GM hopes the platform sharing will help lower development costs and shorten time-to-market. Overseas EV manufacturers are currently outpacing domestic North American development timelines by introducing battery breakthroughs, such as packs capable of achieving a near-full charge in under 10 minutes.
Strict federal trade legislation and high tariff walls heavily restrict or outright block Chinese vehicles from entering the United States market directly. By embedding a highly efficient Chinese-developed platform beneath an established premium American badge, General Motors will be looking to circumvent regulatory trade barriers— who knows what kind of reaction that will garner from Washington.
Currently, Cadillac builds the Optiq at GM's Ramos Arizpe Assembly plant in Coahuila, Mexico. It's unclear if the brand envisions a change in production location to go with the new Chinese platform. GM is unlikely to import next-gen Optiq from China given that it already announced plans to end production of the Chinese-built Buick Envision for the North American market and move it to America starting in 2028.
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via Autobuzz Today
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