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The latest general motors news, distilled by AI into sharp ~100-word summaries. ByteBrief tracks general motors across dozens of tech sources and brings you only what matters, updated hourly. Tap any story for the full brief, or open the original source.

China embraces a low-cost battery technology, but General Motors might not continue using it. The divergence highlights differing strategic priorities in the global electric vehicle market. GM's potential shift could impact supply chains and technology adoption.

General Motors is expanding into grid-scale energy storage through a partnership with Peak Energy to develop next-generation sodium-ion batteries. The move adds value to vehicles beyond transportation and aligns with AI-driven demand for energy storage. The analyst notes this customer trend is one investors should watch.
General Motors partnered with Peak Energy to develop sodium-ion battery cells for grid-scale energy storage. GM will manufacture the cells and Peak will deploy them. Sodium-ion systems can operate across a wider temperature range than lithium-ion, reducing cooling needs. GM also invested in Peak, though the amount was undisclosed.

General Motors and Redwood Materials are deploying a 1.5 MW/7.2 MWh second-life energy storage system at a GM Michigan plant using roughly 100 repurposed EV battery packs. The system is expected to save over $3 million in electricity costs. GM is the first automaker to work with Redwood across the full battery lifecycle.

General Motors is bringing sodium-ion battery production to America. The automaker plans to manufacture the alternative battery chemistry domestically, reducing reliance on lithium and foreign supply chains for electric vehicle components.

General Motors announced at a San Francisco event called GM Empower that it is positioning itself as a distributed utility. The automaker plans to connect over 250,000 bidirectional EVs, grid-scale storage, and a unified charging platform into a virtual power plant fleet. The move puts GM in direct competition with Ford's new Ford Energy unit.

General Motors announced vehicle-to-grid capabilities for current EV owners and a new commercial energy storage strategy using sodium-ion batteries. The automaker aims to leverage millions of idle EV batteries to help stabilize the electrical grid facing rising demand from AI data centers.
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