I spent about two weeks driving the Cadillac Escalade IQ all around British Columbia for this review, and I came out of the experience impressed. It proves that large SUVs can certainly be all-electric, but you need to be willing to have a big and heavy battery pack.
Earlier this month, I road-tripped all over British Columbia in the new Cadillac Escalade IQ with my girlfriend and three friends, putting over 1,000 kilometers on what is by far the biggest electric SUV I’ve ever reviewed. It might just be the biggest electric SUV, period.
After spending so much time behind the wheel, loading it with luggage for five people, and navigating everything from city streets to winding island roads, I have a lot of thoughts on how this massive EV performs as a road trip machine. And let me tell you, its range is absolutely nuts.
Exterior: Unapologetically big and practical
You can’t talk about the Escalade IQ without first addressing its sheer size. It’s a huge truck that makes even a Rivian R1S look small when you park next to it.
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It has a length of 224.3 inches (5,697 mm), a wheelbase of 136.2 inches (3,460 mm), and a height of 76.1 inches (1,933 mm).
While its size is imposing, Cadillac has done a great job with the design. The front features one of the best-executed “fake grilles” I’ve seen on an EV, complete with an illuminated Cadillac logo that gives it a premium look.
But the real story up front is the massive frunk. For our 10-day trip with five people, that front trunk was a lifesaver, swallowing up luggage with ease. There’s even a 120-volt outlet inside, which is a nice, practical touch. One that we didn’t use, to be honest.
The rear is just as spacious, with plenty of cargo room even with the third row in use, plus more hidden storage under the floor for chargers and other gear. This thing is built for hauling people and their stuff, no question about it.
Interior: A mobile executive lounge
Inside, the Escalade IQ I tested was equipped with the “Executive Seat” package, which turns the second row into a first-class cabin. You get two captain’s chairs with the same heating, ventilation, and massaging functions as the front seats. The centerpiece is a giant center console that houses dual wireless phone chargers, USB-C ports, and a deployable workstation table that I found genuinely useful for getting work done on the move.
The drawback is that it makes the third row feel significantly smaller, as there is no space to stretch out between the seats. If you plan to use the third row frequently, I don’t recommend the executive seats.
The dashboard is dominated by screens with a UI that can be overwhelming, but I started to enjoy it after getting used to it within about a week with the car.
The driver gets a clean instrument cluster, there’s a large central infotainment screen, and even the passenger gets their own display. For the back, passengers have their own screens with HDMI inputs, allowing you to connect a gaming console, or whatever else, powered by one of the car’s many outlets.
Driving Experience: A boat with insane range
So, how does a vehicle this massive actually drive? Well, on twisty roads, there’s no hiding its size; it definitely has a boat-like feeling in the corners, which can be a bit much for passengers in the third row.
To be fair, I have limited experience driving SUVs of this size. Therefore, I’m not saying that it is worse than any other large SUV. It was simply how I felt for me coming from generally much smaller vehicles.
But on the highway, it’s a supremely comfortable cruiser. And with 750 horsepower in the V version, featuring Velocity Mode, it delivers the instant, effortless acceleration you expect from a high-end EV, making merging and passing a breeze despite its weight and size.
I especially enjoyed the camera system in the Escalade IQ, including the very accurate and low-distortion 360 view. It makes it a lot easier to handle the giant size in parking and tight situations.
The most impressive part, however, is the range. The Escalade IQ is packing a monstrous 212 kWh battery pack (205 kWh usable), and the results are staggering. On our trip, we saw over 800 km of estimated range on the dashboard. Even fully loaded with five people and luggage, and driving up and down mountains, we were getting an efficiency of around 3.3 km/kWh. That means 676 km (420 miles) of range.
It felt as if I was trying to be a bit more cautious of my efficiency during my driving; I could have pushed it close to the 800 km estimated range.
The regenerative braking is also incredibly effective on a vehicle this heavy. On downhill stretches, I saw it recouping energy at over 150 kW—basically fast-charging itself just by slowing down.
The heads-up display was also useful without being distracting.
Finally, the Escalade IQ is equipped with Supercruise, GM’s ADAS system for highway driving. It did prove useful on highways, but we were mostly driving on highways and country roads where the system is not available.
I find Supercruise to be most useful in traffic on highways.
Electrek’s Take
The Cadillac Escalade IQ demonstrates that large SUVs can be made electric. You just need to be willing to put a large battery pack in it.
While its size may not be for everyone, and its $130,000+ price tag firmly places it in the luxury category, it’s a statement piece.
As battery prices continue to fall and energy density improves, the technology that allows this Escalade to travel 800 km on a charge will eventually find its way into more affordable family SUVs, and increasingly cheaper and lighter vehicles. And that’s something to be excited about.
One thing I would like GM/Cadillac to do with this vehicle, and all their vehicles really, is enable bidirectional charging without being locked into their Ultium system. Let us use this giant battery pack how we want.
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The headquarters of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (ADNOC), right, and Etihad Towers, center, surrounded by residential and commercial properties in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on Sunday, April 10, 2022. It is not just about the oil production that countries need to pay attention to, but also investments in renewables, Alhmeri affirmed.
Christopher Pike | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Global private-equity giant KKR has expanded its partnership with the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, acquiring a minority stake in ADNOC Gas Pipeline Assets.
That ADNOC subsidiary operates 38 gas pipelines and two export terminals in the United Arab Emirates. KKR did not disclose the value of the deal to CNBC.
The partnership follows ADNOC’s 2019 oil pipelines deal with KKR and BlackRock, which opened the door to foreign direct investment across the region.
“This investment reflects KKR’s commitment to expand partnerships and investment across the Middle East,” said David Petraeus, partner at KKR and chairman of the KKR Global Institute and KKR Middle East. “The region’s strong fundamentals, bold vision, and focused leadership offer increasingly attractive opportunities for global investors.”
Earlier this year, the firm appointed former CIA Director Petraeus, who joined KKR in 2013, as chair of its Middle East operations and launched a dedicated investment team led by Julian Barratt-Due.
The transaction marks another milestone in KKR’s expansion in the region. It acquired a stake in Dubai-based Gulf Data Hub, with a combined commitment from the two firms of more than $5 billion to fund the expansion of GDH’s data center network.
The ADNOC gas pipeline network, which links the company’s upstream assets to domestic off-takers across the UAE, remains fully owned and operated by ADNOC. KKR has taken a minority stake, so ADNOC will retain control. KKR’s stake — acquired through its managed accounts — is structured to yield long-term revenue, the company said.
The move expands KKR’s over 16-year presence in the Middle East, with offices in the UAE and Saudi Arabia. The firm now manages more than $90 billion in infrastructure assets globally since launching its infrastructure strategy in 2008, according to information on its website.
Daimler Truck AG CEO Karin Rådström hopped on LinkedIn today and dropped some absolutely wild pro-hydrogen talking points, using words like “emotional” and “inspiring” while making some pretty heady claims about the viability and economics of hydrogen. The rant is doubly embarrassing for another reason: the company’s hydrogen trucks are more than 100 million miles behind Volvo’s electric semis.
For some reason – posts about hydrogen always stir up emotions. I think hydrogen (not “instead of” but “in parallel to” electric) plays a role in the decarbonization of heavy duty transport in Europe for three reasons:
If we would go “electric only” we need to get the electric grid to a level where we can build enough charging stations for the 6 million trucks in Europe. It will take many years and be incredibly expensive. A hydrogen infrastructure in parallel will be less expensive and you don’t need a grid connection to build it, putting 2000 H2 stations in Europe is relatively easy.
Europe will rely on import of energy, and it could be transported into Europe from North Africa and Middle East as liquid hydrogen. Better to use that directly as fuel than to make electricity out of it.
Some use cases of our customers are better suited for fuel cells than electric trucks – the fuel cell truck will allow higher payload and longer ranges.
At European Hydrogen Week, I saw firsthand the energy and ambition behind Europe’s net-zero goals. It’s inspiring—but also a wake-up call. We’re not moving fast enough.
What we need:
Large-scale hydrogen production and transport to Europe
A robust refueling network that goes beyond AFIR
And real political support to make it happen – we need smart, efficient regulation that clears the path instead of adding hurdles.
To show what’s possible, we brought our Mercedes-Benz GenH2 to Brussels. From the end of 2026, we’ll deploy a small series of 100 fuel cell trucks to customers.
Let’s build the infrastructure, the momentum, and the partnerships to make zero-emission transport a reality. 🚛 and let’s try to avoid some of the mistakes that we see now while scaling up electric. And let’s stop the debate about “either or”. We need both.
Daimler CEO at European Hydrogen Week; via LinkedIn.
At the risk of sounding “emotional,” Rådström’s claims that building a hydrogen infrastructure in parallel will be less expensive than building an electrical infrastructure, and that “you don’t need a grid connection to build it,” are objectively false.
Next, the claim that, “Europe will rely on import of energy, and it could be transported into Europe from North Africa and Middle East as liquid hydrogen” (emphasis mine), is similarly dubious – especially when faced with the fact that, in 2023, wind and solar already supplied about 27–30% of EU electricity.
Unless, of course, Mercedes’ solid-state batteries don’t work (and she would know more about that than I would, as a mere blogger).
Electrek’s Take
Via Mahle.
As you can imagine, Karin Rådström post generated quite a few comments at the Electrek watercooler. “Insane to claim that building hydrogen stations would be cheaper than building chargers,” said one fellow writer. “I’m fine with hydrogen for long haul heavy duty, but lying to get us there is idiotic.”
Another comment I liked said, “(Rådström) says that chargers need to be on the grid – you already have a grid, and it’s everywhere!”
At the end of the day, I have to echo the words of one of Mercedes’ storied engineering partners and OEM suppliers, Mahle, whose Chairman, Arnd Franz, who that building out a hydrogen infrastructure won’t be possible without “blue” H made from fossil fuels as recently as last April, and maybe that’s what this is all about: fossil fuel vehicles are where Daimler makes its biggest profits (for now), and muddying the waters and playing up this idea that we’re in some sort of “messy middle” transition makes it just easy enough for a reluctant fleet manager to say, “maybe next time” when it comes to EVs.
We, and the planet, will suffer for such cowardice – but maybe that’s too much malicious intent to ascribe to Ms. Rådström. Maybe this is just a simple “Hanlon’s razor” scenario and there’s nothing much else to read into it.
Let us know what you think of Rådström’s pro-hydrogen comments, and whether or not Daimler’s shareholders should be concerned about the quality of the research behind their CEO’s public posts, in the comments section at the bottom of the page.
SOURCE | IMAGES: Karin Rådström, via LinkedIn.
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Chevy flew us out to San Diego and hosted us for a quick adventure to the mountains east of the city to show off the new Chevy Silverado Trail Boss EV. Was this the new boss of the trails or just some expensive inside and outside trim updates? As usual, the answer lies in between. Let’s take a look…
Exterior
Chevy’s Silverado EVs have a distictive look from the ICE varieties and that contiues with the new Trail Boss trim. Most notable is the smaller grill, hiding the large Frunk and triangular blades on the bed, both of which make the aero on the EV version better.
The trail boss extends the rugged looks on the outside with a 2-inch lift, and 35-inch all terrain tires. Somehow however, Chevy rates the same 410 miles extended/478 miles Max range as the unlefted, smaller tire LT. There is a slightly reduced 625/725 horsepower over the 645/760 horsepower LT but higher torque which jibes with the bigger tires and the off roading motif.
Standard four-wheel steer and Sidewinder diagonal steering give it the ability steer around tight corners and drive diagonally like its GMC Hummer and Sierra Crabwalking brethren.
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Interior
The inside of the Trail Boss is distinctly sport/rugged exclusive (any color as long as it is) Black and Artemis interior with Red accent stitching reminiscent of the Chevy Blazer EV SS. Like other Silverado EVs, there’s a midgate that allows lots of expandibility options.
The drive
There’s a lot to love about the drive. I’m always amazed how well this huge GM EVs handle driving around town. I got to trailer a 10,000lb Polaris for 20 minutes and almost forgot it was there (which ironically is probably its biggest safety hazard). Unfortunately we weren’t on any Supercruise approved roads but I’ve taken the Sierra EV out on long trips and it is one of, if not the best Super Cruise form factors available.
Off roading was a little tame for my tastes – perhaps I’ve been spoiled by Rivian adventures. We hit some dirt roads/trails in a very slow a deliberate manner. With the huge, heavy battery, long wheelbase and gargantuan footprint, this isn’t as agile through the trails as I’d hoped. However that rear steering did help turning radius quite a bit and it chomed up everything we threw at it, especially in Off-road mode. I think the Silverado has a lot more to offer than what we got to see on this trip in terms of off roading. In the breif moments I was able to air this thing out, on road and off, it never dissapointed.
Charging
Charging for the Trail Boss is almost completely like the other Silverado EVs which means very fast CCS (no native NACS yet) charging on a huge battery. GM claims 100 miles in 10 minutes. On the Max battery, that will be at 350kW, 300kW on the extended battery. I have to give Chevy props however for making charging part of this adventure. We stopped at a Tesla Supercharger station, whipped out or NACS adapters and let it fly. At over 86% state of charge, we still got over 120kW of charging speed which is only slightly less impressive when you consider this is sort of like 2x100kWh batteries charging at 60kW/ea.
Electrek’s take
GM’s monster 205kWh hour battery is still the only game in town for those who want to tow really long distances or get huge range out of a monumentally inefficient full-sized pickup design. For towing, nothing will take you further between charges, Silverado/Sierra EVs are the distance champs.
The Silverado EV Trail Boss though takes that off road in a meaningful way with the lift, bigger tires and off road modes, perhaps not as seriously as the Hummer EV but at a much more palatable starting price of $72,000.
Also this is the biggest mobile battery in town with its 10kW output which will go full bore for an amazing 20 hours on a charge. That means you can run your house/campsite/worksite/etc for much longer and at higher power than anyone else.
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