The company made the announcement on Friday, Aug. 20, saying it is expanding the recall to include 2017-2022 Chevrolet Bolt vehicles due to the risk that the high-voltage battery packs could catch fire.
This means the recall now covers all Bolt vehicles, including vehicles that received a repair from an earlier recall.
CNBC reported that the expansion brings the total cost that GM is expected to pay to replace the battery modules to $1.8 billion.
GM is advising Bolt vehicle owners to park their cars outside, away from structures. The company also said the cars should not be charged overnight.
Learn more about the recall here.
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