Gas-Powered Engine Revival in High Gear
GM revving up to create new V-8 engines as EVs flounder.
(Photo by: Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Americans arenโt as excited about electric vehicles (EVs) as they once were, so now General Motors (GM) is getting back in the gas-burning game. The company announced a major production shift at its Tonawanda Propulsion plant in New York state. GM has abandoned its previously announced $300 million capital investment in EV drive units and devoted $888 million to the production of its sixth-generation V-8 gas-powered engine in 2027. The move represents a significant shift in the wind direction of the market, reflecting changing attitudes and policies related to EVs and the expected impacts of President Donald Trumpโs tariffs. It may also be a bellwether of consumer demand.
Cars With New Muscle?
The new engines are not designed to revive the muscle cars of yesteryear, but history offers an interesting contrast to the current car climate. The 1960s provided American consumers with heavy, super-powerful sports cars that burned a lot of gasoline, spewed copious plumes of air pollution, and were made in the good olโ USA.
In the 1970s, the OPEC oil embargo slowed Middle East oil production, choking supplies to an energy-thirsty America, which resulted in gas pump prices doubling nearly overnight and sent US car manufacturing into a tailspin. Sales of more efficient foreign car models surged as domestic carmakers redesigned vehicles to accommodate lower weights, smaller engines, and improved fuel efficiency. The โcompact carโ was born.
Following the ebb of the oil crisis, versions of the muscle car returned as gas prices relaxed. Still, the era of huge big-block engines and high-horsepower, Starsky & Hutch-style flashiness faded into cultural memory. Foreign car makers secured name recognition on US shores. Subarus, Hondas, and Toyotas became familiar sights in suburban American driveways โ consumers liked them.
Clouds Hover Over EVs
Then came the push for EVs, hailed as saviors from an existential climate crisis. Backed by legal mandates, hefty government subsidies, and a โcarcophonyโ of media approval, EV cars โ often manufactured abroad โ made a rapid appearance. Major US car manufacturers rushed to keep up with the times. GMโs EV sales leapt 94% in the first quarter of 2025 compared to the same period last year.
But the times they are a-changinโ. Bidenโs Inflation Reduction Act EV subsidies are expiring. A bizarre campaign to vandalize, burn, and sell Teslas has consumers puzzled. EV depreciation rates are increasingly astronomical in the first year of ownership. As consumers rushed to buy new cars pre-tariff in early 2025, many chose gas-powered options. Promised EV muscle cars donโt exist, and consumers and the media are becoming aware that EVs pitched as sparing the world from greenhouse gases are decidedly unsparing to the environment: Lithium and cobalt mining pollutes horribly, and massive batteries create an environmental nightmare upon disposal. The electric grid is still largely powered by fossil fuels (and will increase in electricity usage by 40% due to EV power needs), and electric car charging stations are not widely available. Consumers have also seen that EVs are neither reliable nor efficient in the cold winter temperatures that many endure seasonally.
The recent Senate reversal on Californiaโs EV mandates reflects a realist market approach. Vermont Gov. Phil Scott recently paused unrealistic market controls that would have banned the sale of gas-powered vehicles there. New York State has similarly slammed the brakes on banning gas-powered vehicles, perhaps aided by the 870 good-paying jobs expected at Tonawanda Propulsion.
Gas-Powered Economic Growth
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) has praised GMโs expansion of gas-powered vehicles, and the state will provide up to $16.96 million in tax credits in return for the companyโs investment commitments. Hochul gushed about GMโs plant-change announcement:
โI look forward to seeing New Yorkโs partnership with GM bring the next generation of automotive technology to its Tonawanda plant and I thank them for their tremendous support and belief in Western New York.โ
Meanwhile, foreign carmakers are reeling from US tariffs that are raising the sticker price of their EVs and other cars. Volvo has announced significant layoffs. GMโs CEO, Mary Barra, says she supports Trumpโs 25% auto import tariffs as a way to level the playing field for US automakers. OPEC just announced it will be increasing production by 411,000 barrels per day in June, causing oil prices to post their most significant monthly drop since 2021. For US car manufacturers, the current changes are driving production shifts like the 1970s oil crisis (when America lost 300,000 auto industry jobs) in reverse gear.
The truth about EVs is that they are not what they have been cracked up to be by public relations departments, politicians, and automotive and mainstream media. Meanwhile, there have been substantial design improvements that have boosted internal combustion energy efficiency and performance, many of which were initiated during the OPEC crisis, requiring US companies to develop fuel injection technology, computer-controlled engines, and improved aerodynamic designs.
Consumers Drive GMโs Future
GM is not abandoning EV cars. A recent Barronโs report cites the company as still allocating 45% of its capital and R&D spending to EV development, while 55% will be directed toward conventional gas-powered engines. This allocation comes in the wake of recent engine failures in the companyโs L87 V8 engines, resulting in a recall of more than 600,000 units.
EV sales made up a mere 6% of total US vehicle sales in early 2025. GMโs Cadillac Lyriq, an electric SUV, achieved record sales of 5,800 units in the first quarter of the year, a 499% year-over-year increase. Yet its gas-powered Silverado pick-up dwarfed that feat with sales of 128,926 units in the first quarter.
Those sales figures may be the most potent driver of GMโs investment in new gas-powered engine production. Consumers want reliability, affordability, and something that doesnโt need to be plugged into a dubious national electric grid, subsidized by even more dubious federal and state tax breaks. American car making is getting back on track!
(Originally published with Liberty Nation News.)
Eventually we will need an energy transition, but nor battery powered vehicles, nor the intermittent and environmentally disastrous power sources of wind and solar are a reasonable solution. We need to invest into next generation technologies.
The concept of the EV is a good one, but we simply don't have an infrastructure that can support it. The environmental people think it is cleaner but really it does more harm than good. The average lifespan of the workers in the lithium mines is around 35. The batteries are not renewable or recyclable (yet). The hydrogen technology is there and capable of using the internal combustion engine which would turn every vehicle into an air cleaner instead of a polluter. The problem here is that there is no money (fuel wise) in cars that can run on water so the oil cartel squashes most hydrogen technology. Money runs the show in our world at this time. A change of thinking is a gradually change that will take time to develop. The technologies are here. The control systems are in place now but are showing the signs of dying out. We are a few decades away from current thinking. The old saying is,
" If you do what you always have done, you will get what you always have got!"