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Gogoro (NASDAQ: GGR) announced today that its highly-acclaimed battery swapping system designed for electric scooters and motorbikes is ready to rollout in India next month. The announcement came as Gogoro and local EV delivery company Zypp Electric unveiled a new partnership that will see Gogoro’s batteries and scooters soon zipping around Delhi.

Zypp Electric is India’s leading EV-as-a-service platform. The company’s mission focuses on decarbonizing last-mile deliveries in India with an ecosystem of electric vehicles and EV-based technology.

The company handles daily deliveries for everything from local merchants to e-commerce giants using its fleet of over 7,000 EVs.

India, like many Asian countries, relies heavily on fast and efficient two-wheeled vehicles including scooters and motorcycles that can weave through gridlocked traffic and take routes that are inaccessible to larger four-wheeled vehicles.

With the electric scooter and motorcycle market booming in India, Gogoro and Zypp are set to take full advantage of Gogoro’s battery swapping as an effective tool to keep those EVs on the road instead of parked at a charging station.

As Gogoro’s CEO and founder Horace Luke explained in a statement provided to Electrek:

“We are seeing an incredible global transformation of urban transportation and energy systems to smarter, cleaner, and safer electric power, and there is nowhere it will benefit more than India. With more than 350 million battery swaps to date, Gogoro is introducing its advanced battery swapping platform in India to establish a new generation of electric two-wheel transportation that is proven, safe, and reliable.

Today, we are announcing a strategic partnership with Zypp Electric, India’s leading EV-as-a-Service platform, to launch a B2B pilot in Delhi that will enable last mile delivery fleets to begin to adopt sustainable energy and transform their businesses for the future using Gogoro battery swapping.”

gogoro zypp battery swapping

The model uses distributed battery swap stations called GoStations that constantly charge and deploy batteries. Riders simply roll up to a station, toss their nearly empty batteries into a receptacle and receive freshly charged batteries in return.

The entire process takes seconds and is quicker than a typical refueling stop on an ICE-powered motorcycle or scooter.

For last-mile deliveries where the vehicles are often on the road all day without time to stop and charge, battery swapping is the perfect solution.

As Zypp Electric’s co-founder and CEO Akash Gupta described:

“Climate change & rising pollution are a major global concern and many world leaders are committed to bringing a change with revolutionary measures that perfectly align with our vision at Zypp Electric. We are super excited to partner with Gogoro, a like-minded global EV player stepping into the Indian market and decarbonizing Indian last-mile deliveries with Gogoro’s state-of-the-art battery swapping platform that is proven at scale to be safe, easy for riders to use, easy to deploy in cities and open to all businesses.

We expect this partnership to set an example for how a network of battery swapping stations and EVs which will create a robust EV ecosystem towards solving the last mile problem efficiently across the country.” 

gogoro nasdaq

Gogoro has previously listed India as a prime market for expansion, which makes sense considering there are more than 200 million motorcycles and scooters currently on Indian roads.

The company recently appointed Kaushik Burman as the general manager of India for Gogoro. Burman previously led Gogoro’s global expansion.

As Burman illustrated, Gogoro has already been working with the Indian government for regulatory approvals:

“Today’s strategic initiative and partnership with Zypp is a first step in validating and demonstrating Gogoro’s proven leadership in battery swapping while also learning from local businesses and riders. Gogoro is a founding member of the Indian battery swapping association (IBSA), and we are collaborating with multiple industry partners and regulatory authorities to contribute to a better India. Gogoro has been working to secure all of the relevant certifications for its batteries and battery swapping stations.”

Gogoro spent the better part of six years largely focused on expanding its proven battery swapping network within its domestic market of Taiwan. There the company operates thousands of battery swapping stations and has seen a total of over 350 million battery swaps. Each day there are more than 250,000 battery swaps in the country. Taiwan will soon have more Gogoro GoStations than gas stations.

Other companies have recently announced similar-looking battery swapping systems, but Gogoro’s early market entry and years of real world verification have helped it become a de facto battery swapping standard.

Over the last few years Gogoro has set its sights on international expansion. Some countries like Indonesia, India and Singapore are seeing B2B operations like the one announced today with Zypp Electric.

But just a few months ago Gogoro launched its first consumer retail expansion when it entered the Israeli market, offering its electric scooters for sale to riders who now subscribe to Gogoro’s battery swapping network.

I actually got one of the first Gogoro scooters in Israel (above) and I’ve already made a half dozen or so battery swaps in Tel Aviv, where the distributed swap stations are never more than 2 miles (3.2 km) from riders. With ranges of up to 60 miles (100 km) in the city, running out of charge is a non-issue.

Now that Gogoro is proving its system both at home and abroad, further expansion of the leading battery swapping company looks all but certain.

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GM unveils new Chevy Bolt – same package, new battery, low $29k price

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GM unveils new Chevy Bolt - same package, new battery, low k price

GM has unveiled the new version of the Chevy Bolt, its popular, affordable EV with an upgraded battery and an otherwise very similar package to its last iteration, and we’re on the scene at the unveiling at Universal Studios Hollywood to get you all the info you need.

The Chevy Bolt was originally released in the 2017 model year. It was GM’s first real, modern effort at an EV, designed to be all-electric rather than a compliance car like the old Chevy Spark EV. (GM did previously design the EV1 from the ground up, but it came along before the lithium ion era of EVs, and was decidedly a compliance car).

It was also a great car. Not only was it a good size unlike the ridiculous land yachts we’re seeing so many of today, it had a phenomenal price, especially near the end of the model’s life. It was good enough to be Electrek’s vehicle of the year for 2022.

But, due to an extended recall and because the Bolt used GM’s first-gen EV platform, rather than its whiz-bang new “Ultium” system, GM retired the vehicle in late 2023, even though it was having its best sales year ever.

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But, that wasn’t the end for the model. After declaring the Bolt dead but before ending production on it, GM said that it would bring back an Ultium-based Chevy Bolt (which our publisher Seth Weintraub has taken to calling the “Boltium”).

And now, it’s finally time for the official unveiling, and we’re on hand at Universal Studios Hollywood for a “Bolt Block Party” showing off the new vehicle.

Meet the new Bolt, same as the old Bolt

When Chevy retired the Bolt and said they would bring it back later, we expected it to be similar, but perhaps not this similar. From the exterior, the new Bolt and the old Bolt EUV are nearly indistinguishable.

The front fascia is slightly modified with a black line between the headlights and no black border around the fake grille, and the rear has different taillights (lifted higher, a big demand from Bolt owners), and slightly more paint on the bumper. That’s about it. But we knew all that already, after seeing it charging in public last week.

Now we’re getting information on the interior and specs, which are the juicy updates we were hoping to hear changes on.

GM hasn’t publicized 0-60 times yet, but the Bolt will use the same motor as the Equinox EV, which gives 210hp. That’s about the same as the previous Bolt, and it weighs a similar amount, so we’re imagining similar performance as the 6-ish seconds 0-60 of the previous Bolt – peppy and more than enough for any daily needs, but not a sportscar.

In particular, the original Bolt’s main technical limitation was its low DC charge speed. It maxed out at 50kW, but often was even slower than that. In a world where many vehicles can now charge at 200kW+ speeds, the new Bolt needed an update.

Thankfully, it got one. The new Bolt is now capable of a 150kW charge rate, with a 10-80% charge in 26 minutes. GM says this is about three times faster than the previous generation.

This is due to a new 65kWh LFP battery, utilizing GM’s Ultium EV platform. The previous Bolt used LG cells, and was built before GM developed Ultium. This led the Bolt to be the only vehicle in GM’s EV stable on a different technology, and is what necessitated its retirement and retooling.

The new battery also offers different specs, with 255 miles of range (GM estimate). That’s a bit more than before, which is nice, plus you can charge to 100% every night because it’s LFP. But the DC charge speeds are really the bigger story here. Faster DC charge rates enable more seamless roadtrips.

Further enabling those roadtrips is the Bolt’s new NACS port, allowing it to use the Tesla Supercharger network. An adapter is still available to use on CCS networks, but Superchargers are typically a better experience, and the whole industry is moving in that direction at this point.

Another major change is in the Bolt’s software. The previous one had CarPlay, but this one won’t.

A lot of people are unhappy about that, and I understand the unhappiness. People have gotten used to CarPlay (or Android Auto), and lots of people love it, because it’s so much better than the software from whatever 2010s-era vehicle they came from. Infotainment systems have been horrendous in vehicles for a long time.

However, I argue that these phone-based car UIs aren’t actually that great. They are inherently generic, and unable to be tied deeply into vehicle functions in a way that provides a single coherent interface. That’s why I actually liked the UI in the Blazer EV, GM’s first implementation of its post-CarPlay solution, and continue to think that GM made an acceptable choice here.

So, I do think the Bolt UI will turn out okay. GM may take a little time to iron out some kinks, but in the longer term, I think this solution is better, and will enable over-the-air updates which saves time and trouble for everyone.

The interior has had a refresh with larger display, added ambient lighting, and cupholders which can be rearranged to accommodate larger cups. It also has more dash storage for passengers.

Rear cargo space is the same as the outgoing Bolt EUV at 16 cubic feet with the seats up, or 57 with the seats down. Incidentally, with the seats down, this is actually the same amount of cargo space as the Equinox EV, which is 20 inches longer than the Bolt. Quite a feat of packaging efficiency here.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the price. Chevy says the launch edition will be a limited run at $29,990, and then later will be accompanied by an LT trim with base price $28,995. That’s quite an attractive price, and as of right now, makes it the cheapest EV announced in America.

Electrek’s Take

One interesting thing about this unveiling is its timing – or rather, the timing of another unveiling which happened just about 24 hours ago. That’s when Tesla finally took the wraps off its long-promised “more affordable” EV, which turned out to just be a stripped-down version of its Model 3/Y with a still disappointingly-high $37k-$40k base price.

Tesla’s timing for that announcement could have been an attempt to steal the wind from the Bolt’s sails, but given the pricing of that vehicle compared to this one, we’re thinking that there may not be much cannibalization.

My main disappointment in the Bolt is that the new model is based on the EUV version, rather than the EV version. The previous iteration of the Bolt originally came in a smaller version dubbed the EV, with a six-inches-longer EUV version coming later. The EV actually sold in higher numbers than the EUV throughout the model’s life, but it was also available for longer.

But when Chevy announced it would bring back the Bolt, it said the new version would be EUV-only. At the time I found this folly, and I still do. We need smaller cars, not larger ones. While the EUV is still a more reasonably-sized vehicle than almost anything else on the road, I am still disappointed that it is moving in the wrong direction as far as size goes.

Nevertheless, in the current US environment where everyone seems determined to make using roads as unsafe as possible, the EUV is still smaller than the vast majority of cars available

And the price, well, that’s really the kicker. After republicans raised the price of every EV by $7,500 during an affordability crisis, with unwise tariffs also inflating consumer prices at the same time, it’s getting harder to buy a vehicle.

But the Bolt now joins the fray as one of the most affordable EVs out there, alongside the new Nissan Leaf which will cost under 30k (and even less, once a future lower-spec trim is announced), and significantly cheaper than other low-ish-priced EVs like the Equinox EV, Ioniq 5, and the aforementioned “more affordable” standard Model 3/Y.

That’s a big deal, and it makes the new Bolt a similar calculation as when it earned Electrek’s Vehicle of the Year. But now, it doesn’t even have the main downside it had at the time – its low DC charge rate, and battery questions during what was a messy recall. Both of those problems were solved here, leaving a calculation with few downsides.

We haven’t driven the car yet, though we’ll get a few minutes in it later in the event. But it’s only going to be around the block at the Universal backlot, so we can’t give a full review, but from what we’ve seen today, it looks like quite an attractive value proposition.

We’re still at the event right now for the next few hours, so if you’ve got any questions that you’d like us to check on or relay to GM employees, let us know in the comments and we’ll see if we can get some answers (especially you Bolt owners). And, we just got all this info, so we’ll be updating this article as we digest more.


The 30% federal solar tax credit is ending this year. If you’ve ever considered going solar, now’s the time to act. To make sure you find a trusted, reliable solar installer near you that offers competitive pricing, check out EnergySage, a free service that makes it easy for you to go solar. It has hundreds of pre-vetted solar installers competing for your business, ensuring you get high-quality solutions and save 20-30% compared to going it alone. Plus, it’s free to use, and you won’t get sales calls until you select an installer and share your phone number with them.

Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisors to help you every step of the way. Get started here.

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This clever system taps basement temps to cool your home, and now it can heat, too

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This clever system taps basement temps to cool your home, and now it can heat, too

New York-based Cool Down makes a thermal transfer system that moves naturally cool air from your basement into your living space while sending excess heat back down below to cool homes more efficiently. By dispersing that heat into the ground, Cool Down helps keep homes comfortable during hot summer months and cuts electricity bills in the process.

Cool Down’s system has already been shown to reduce air conditioning use by up to 67% per season by leveraging the consistent temperatures found in basements. With the release of its upgraded Smart Control Unit, the company is adding even more functionality and savings for homeowners across different climates.

The new Smart Control Unit introduces a range of intelligent features that make the system more versatile and user-friendly. Homeowners can now see their estimated energy savings in real time, giving them a clear picture of their return on investment and helping them optimize system performance. A new Basic Heating Mode means the system can now be used in winter to capture and circulate heat from areas with wood or pellet stoves, mini-splits, or rooms with south-facing windows. The addition of a Dehumidification Mode allows your AC or heat pump to dry out basement spaces just like the rest of the house, improving indoor air quality and further reducing cooling costs.

For days when comfort takes priority, Power Boost Mode temporarily ramps up cooling and dehumidification performance. Eco Boost Mode maximizes efficiency by preventing the AC or heat pump from switching on, which is ideal for shoulder seasons or mild climates. And for homes without ductwork, Standalone Mode enables Cool Down to operate as a central cooling system on its own, delivering significant cost savings even if it’s not as powerful as a traditional AC.

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“The Smart Control Unit is about putting more control – and more savings – in the hands of homeowners,” said Damien Semel-DeFeo, founder of Cool Down. “These new modes allow the system to be customized for any home, climate, or energy-use goal.”

Cool Down offers a practical, low-cost alternative or supplement to traditional cooling systems as electricity rates continue to rise nationwide. The system is professionally installed in just a few hours, integrates with or without existing HVAC equipment, and requires no refrigerants, compressors, or external condensers.

Read more: Trump wants to kill ENERGY STAR – here’s how that impacts you


The 30% federal solar tax credit is ending this year. If you’ve ever considered going solar, now’s the time to act. To make sure you find a trusted, reliable solar installer near you that offers competitive pricing, check out EnergySage, a free service that makes it easy for you to go solar. It has hundreds of pre-vetted solar installers competing for your business, ensuring you get high-quality solutions and save 20-30% compared to going it alone. Plus, it’s free to use, and you won’t get sales calls until you select an installer and share your phone number with them. 

Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisors to help you every step of the way. Get started here.

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The Hyundai IONIQ 9 is getting a new look

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The Hyundai IONIQ 9 is getting a new look

The IONIQ 9 is about to get an upgrade. Hyundai’s new electric SUV was spotted with some serious off-road upgrades, hinting that a new XRT trim is on the way.

The Hyundai IONIQ 9 XRT brings a new off-road look

It may look like it’s straight out of the future, but Hyundai’s first three-row electric SUV is actually pretty impressive.

The IONIQ 9 offers a lounge-like interior with space than a Ford Explorer, boasts an impressive driving range, and features an interior loaded with advanced tech and digital screens. What else could you ask for?

How about an upgraded off-road version? We knew the IONIQ 9 was likely due for the XRT treatment after a camouflaged model was spotted last year rocking all-terrain tires, a souped-up suspension, and an added tow wrench on the front bumper.

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Hyundai’s design boss, Simon Loasby, confirmed that two new IONIQ 9 variants, including a rugged off-road and a high-performance model, were in the works after unveiling the electric SUV last year.

According to TheKoreanCarBlog, Loasby said, “We are working on two distinct projects—N and XRT—apart from the standard lineup,” Loasby said.

After another IONIQ 9 with similar off-road elements, it seems only a matter of time before Hyundai makes it official.

The new photo from Kindelauto shows a prototype with similar upgrades to the vehicle spotted last year, including large all-terrain tires, a lifted suspension, and more.

A new video from HealerTV offers a closer look at the IONIQ 9 XRT in South Korea. The footage reveals unique tow hooks and an added XRT screen, which hasn’t been seen in the IONIQ lineup yet.

From the side, you can see the XRT model is slightly taller than the standard IONIQ 9 with off-road tires. Like the IONIQ 5 XRT, the larger electric SUV is expected to receive XRT-exclusive front and rear bumpers, side skirts, and 18″ wheels.

Inside, the IONIQ 5 XRT model features H-Trex seating with the XRT pattern, logo, and XRT-badged all-weather mats.

The 2026 Hyundai IONIQ 9 starts at $60,555 in the US with an EPA-estimated range of 335 miles. In Europe, the IONIQ 9 will start at £64,995 ($87,500), offering a WLTP driving range of up to 385 miles.

2026 Hyundai IONIQ 9 Model EV Powertrain Drivetrain Driving
Range
(miles)
Starting Price
(including destination fee)
IONIQ 9 RWD S 160-kW (215-HP)
Electric Motor
Rear-
Wheel
Drive
335 $60,555
IONIQ 9 AWD SE 226.1 kW (303-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
320 $64,365
IONIQ 9 AWD SEL 226.1-kW (303-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
320 $67,920
IONIQ 9 AWD 
PERFORMANCE LIMITED
314.6-kW (422-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
311 $72,850
IONIQ 9 AWD
PERFORMANCE
CALLIGRAPHY
314.6-kW (422-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
311 $76,590
IONIQ 9 AWD
PERFORMANCE
CALLIGRAPHY DESIGN
314.6-kW (422-HP)
Dual Electric Motors
All-Wheel
Drive
311 $78,090
2026 Hyundai IONIQ 9 prices and driving range by trim (*including a $1,600 destination fee)

Since the IONIQ 5 XRT is priced below the Limited AWD trim, starting at $55,400 in the US, the new IONIQ 9 trim could follow a similar pricing structure. The current range-topping IONIQ 9 AWD Performance Calligraphy Design trim starts at $78,090.

Will the IONIQ 9 N be next? Stay tuned for more.

Want to check out Hyundai’s electric SUVs for yourself? You can use our links below to see what’s available in your area.

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