
General Motors is preparing its new, as-yet-unnamed Chevrolet midsize  pickup truck for global production in Thailand and it expects to sell at  least 100,000 of the trucks in the model's first year. But don't expect  "global" to include the U.S., as this truck is reportedly being  developed for markets outside our borders, most notably Brazil, Europe,  and Southeast Asia.
In a phone interview with Automotive News, GM Southeast  Asian Executive Director Martin Apfel stated that Brazil and Thailand  are "the two centers of gravity for midsize trucks," further  highlighting GM's lessening commitment to small trucks here in the U.S.  To help it build momentum in the emerging markets, GM has acquired loans  backed by Thai banks to assist with expansion of GM's 165-acre Rayong  facility in an effort to expand capacity to more than 80,000 vehicles a  year. The Rayong facility currently assembles the Chevrolet  Aveo and Colorado  and produced roughly 40,000 units last year.
"The logical  consequence is to build where the customer wants it, as that keeps your  costs down," said Apfel.
While the global Colorado replacement  will also be exported overseas, it's doubtful it will see U.S. soil.  Earlier this week, we  reported on GM's patent images of an unidentified Chevrolet truck,  which could very well be the future Thailand-built model, despite the  listing of Brazil as its primary place of domicile. The status of the  U.S.-market Colorado/GMC Canyon remains in limbo as GM has made no  official statement about what it plans to do with its long neglected  midsize truck lineup.
On top of the expanding Rayong facility, a  new, neighboring diesel engine plant is approaching its final  stages of construction. The small diesel engines, which were jointly  developed with Italian engine maker VM Motori, will be used in the new  Chevrolet trucks as part of GM's ultimate plan to invest $467 million in  Thailand.
As GM gets its global trucks in line, reputable word  has it a global compact van bearing the Chevy badge will be launching  soon. Announced during GM's  first annual Global Business Conference yesterday, the small van is  likely the Orlando  concept we've been seeing and hearing much about, although  it appears the U.S. won't be on the receiving end. GM Vice Chairman  Tom Stephens said the van would be available in several global regions  but didn't specify any key locations. A three-row Buick GL8 business van  is in the works for China but launch dates were similarly kept on the  mum.
Thanks to: Motor Trend