She backpedaled from that recently. I thought.
Regardless, unless you see a significant increase in electric generation capacity soon, there is no way to meet that goal…simply not enough kWh available to replace all that petroleum energy in the fleet.
You are right, it probably won't happen in 2035, but I find it very interesting that GM has decided to spend what will end up being over $1 billion on a new small block engine family. No other automakers are spending money to design entirely new engine families, instead they are modifying existing designs and adding hybrid motors. I think it is very reasonable to expect that California and the states that follow will not back off on their EV mandates, so there will be ICE bans in place in 2035 in some very significant markets. While these places may not be huge volume markets for GM trucks, I would be willing to bet that these areas, which contain many of the most affluent parts of the nation, are very significant for the most profitable, loaded up trims of the pickups and SUVs (Denalis, Escalade etc.)
To me the fact that GM is spending so much to develop the "Gen 6 Small Block" suggests that they know that they can not fix the problems with their current cylinder deactivation system and this is what spurred them to design an entirely new engine family which will not show up until around 2026.