| General Motors Co (GM) will produce its next-generation electric cars in    South Korea, the head of its South Korean unit    told Reuters on Thursday, as the U.S. carmaker tries to revive momentum for    the stalling vehicle technology. Sergio    Rocha, CEO of GM Korea, gave no time frame for the launch of the    new vehicles, but said they would be slightly bigger than the Spark small car    and use a thoroughly new design, unlike the Spark EV which was based on an    existing gasoline engine model. GM will continue working    with South Korea's LG Chem Ltd to supply batteries for its second generation    of electric vehicles, which will be produced at    GM's plant in Bupyeong, near Seoul, he added. "This    (next-generation electric) car has a lot of similarities with the products we    produce today in Bupyeong," Rocha said in the interview, on the    sidelines of the Seoul auto show. GM Korea, which makes    more than 40 percent of GM's Chevrolet-branded vehicles and specializes in    developing small cars for the U.S. company, produces the Aveo, Trax, Captiva    and Malibu at its Bupyeong plant. Electric vehicles such as    GM's Volt and Nissan Motor Co's Leaf are struggling to gain traction, hobbled    by limited driving range, a lack of charging infrastructure and high prices. GM Chief Executive Dan    Akerson said early this month that the U.S. automaker was developing new EVs,    including one with a 100-mile range and another with a 200-mile range. GM Korea started    production of its current generation of Spark    EVs in Korea this month for export to the U.S.    market and plans to begin selling it in South Korea and Europe in the second    half of the year. LG Chem makes the    lithium-ion batteries for GM's electric vehicles, which are produced in Korea    and the United States. | 
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