{"slug": "gm-developed-its-hummer-ev-in-20-months-it-wants-that-speed-to-be-routine", "title": "GM developed its Hummer EV in 20 months. It wants that speed to be routine.", "summary": "General Motors is using artificial intelligence, simulation, and decades of engineering data to compress its vehicle development timeline from the standard four to six years down to two years. The automaker, which already developed the GMC Hummer EV in 20 months, aims to make that speed routine across all its brands, including Chevrolet, Cadillac, and GMC. The push comes as GM faces pressure from rapidly launching Chinese automakers, shifting EV demand, and fluctuating federal regulations.", "body_md": "General Motors wants to find its \"uh oh\" moments earlier.\n\nFor years, automakers have built physical prototypes to learn how a car behaves on the road, cools passengers down, burns through energy, or even crashes. Those builds can be expensive and time-consuming.\n\nIn an interview with Business Insider, [GM's chief product officer, Sterling Anderson](https://www.businessinsider.com/gm-hires-former-tesla-exec-ronalee-mann-self-driving-cruise-2025-12), and executive director of virtual integration engineering, Jason Fischer, said the automaker is using AI, simulation, and decades of engineering data to move more of that discovery work into the virtual world.\n\nGM — which runs brands including Chevrolet, Cadillac, and GMC — is targeting a two-year vehicle development process. That's down from the standard four- to six-year vehicle development cycle.\n\n\"Physical properties are really becoming confirmation builds,\" Fischer, a 28-year GM veteran, said, rather than \"the first time we've discovered something that we've missed.\"\n\nThe push comes as the auto industry is facing several headwinds at once. [Chinese automakers](https://www.businessinsider.com/ford-ceo-jim-farley-chinese-carmakers-entering-us-devastating-2026-4) are launching new, lower-cost vehicles at a rapid clip. America's EV appetite has not met initial expectations, forcing automakers to [write down billions of dollars](https://www.businessinsider.com/stellantis-stock-jeep-ram-chrysler-ev-retreat-26-billion-charge-2026-2) in production investments. And federal emissions rules, tariffs, and consumer incentives for vehicle sales have swung back and forth between presidential administrations.\n\nThose pressures are forcing automakers to rethink how long they can afford to spend developing new vehicles. Executives at [Nissan and Hyundai have previously told](https://www.businessinsider.com/car-companies-ai-production-rising-costs-new-york-auto-show-2026-4) Business Insider that they are trying to cut down the time it takes to bring cars to market.\n\nNow, GM tells Business Insider it's confident it can meet its timeline goal because it's done it before: The [GMC Hummer EV](https://www.businessinsider.com/gmc-hummer-ev-electric-truck-review-silly-but-fun-2022-12) took them 20 months to move from concept to production.\n\n\"We want that to be the norm, not an exception,\" Anderson, a former Tesla and Aurora Innovation executive, said. \"The team did a number of Herculean things to make that happen. These tools are making it possible for our entire product development organization to do the same thing without the heroics for every vehicle we build.\"\n\n## GM is testing the car before it exists\n\nGM's faster-development push is powered by a mix of bespoke virtual tools and AI models trained on or informed by the automaker's own engineering data.\n\nFischer said GM rarely uses an \"exact off-the-shelf tool.\" Instead, the company works with software suppliers to customize tools for its own vehicle programs and has also built some of the technology internally.\n\n\"We have a lot of IP ownership on some of the techniques that we've developed,\" Fischer said.\n\nGM declined to specify how much it budgets for AI usage by product designers or engineers. Instead, the company said it's focused less on token volume and more on whether AI solves real business problems.\n\nIn one demo, GM showed a Cadillac Lyriq running a cone avoidance maneuver — a common safety test run by Consumer Reports — with several engineering and design teams brought into \"a single virtual environment,\" Fischer said.\n\nThat lets GM test how hardware and software behave together earlier — and under more weather conditions. Fischer said engineers can rerun the tests in different road conditions, including ice, snow, and rain.\n\nThe same approach applies to less flashy parts of the car, too. Fischer said GM can use co-simulation to model airflow, refrigerant behavior, cabin comfort, range, energy efficiency, and fuel economy together. Work that might have taken months can now happen in \"hours or days,\" he said.\n\nThe models even suggested different designs for a bracket in the Corvette's rear hood. Fischer said it was developed using topology optimization and turned out to be 30% stiffer, 20% lighter, and about 95% more durable than the original design.\n\nGM then added the Corvette symbol in the middle.\n\nGM has spoken with Business Insider before about using AI in design, including tools that [help turn sketches into animations](https://www.businessinsider.com/gm-ai-concept-cars-design-speeds-2026-3) and [monitor its supply chains](https://www.businessinsider.com/how-gm-uses-ai-predict-prevent-costly-supply-chain-disruptions-2025-9).\n\nThis latest push goes into the belly of a car's development process: validating how the vehicle handles, cools, crashes, and integrates hardware and software before GM spends more time and money proving it with a physical build.\n\n\"The winners of this industry are those who iterate like next-gen software companies,\" Anderson said.", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/gm-developed-its-hummer-ev-in-20-months-it-wants-that-speed-to-be-routine", "canonical_source": "https://www.businessinsider.com/gm-interview-ai-prototypes-design-cars-2026-6", "published_at": "2026-06-03 08:57:01+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-06-03 09:17:12.229798+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["artificial-intelligence", "machine-learning", "autonomous-vehicles"], "entities": ["General Motors", "Sterling Anderson", "Jason Fischer", "Chevrolet", "Cadillac", "GMC", "Business Insider", "Hummer EV"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/gm-developed-its-hummer-ev-in-20-months-it-wants-that-speed-to-be-routine", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/gm-developed-its-hummer-ev-in-20-months-it-wants-that-speed-to-be-routine.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/gm-developed-its-hummer-ev-in-20-months-it-wants-that-speed-to-be-routine.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/gm-developed-its-hummer-ev-in-20-months-it-wants-that-speed-to-be-routine.jsonld"}}