By Mike Ramsey 

General Motors Co. said it plans to offer a diesel engine option in its forthcoming medium-size pickup trucks, the Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon.

GM's global vice president of Chevrolet, Alan Batey, said during an analyst presentation that the company sees an opportunity to reach new customers with a diesel offering in the medium-size trucks. He said the new trucks, which will go on sale later this year, will be 1,100 pounds lighter than the current Ford Motor Co. F-150 pickup -- the top-selling pickup.

The trucks will be "extremely fuel efficient," he said. The company hasn't said what the fuel economy of the new trucks would be. The new trucks are slight smaller than the full-size Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra.

Until this year, diesel engines were the province of only the heavy-duty pickups offered by GM, Ford and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV. But Chrysler began offering a diesel on its Ram 1500 earlier this year and it already has been a hit. The Ram is rated to achieve up to 28 miles per gallon on the highway, the best rating for light-duty, full-size trucks.

Ford doesn't have plans to put a diesel in its forthcoming, all-aluminum, 2015 F-150, which is roughly the same size as the Ram and Silverado and Sierra. Instead it has reduced the weight by 700 pounds and will offer a 2.7-liter, turbocharged V6 to attain higher mileage. GM, though, is hoping that the combination of a slightly smaller truck, combined with a diesel engine, will appeal to a new range of buyers. Nissan Motor Co. also has pledged to put a diesel engine in its full-size pickup, the Titan.

"Our midsize truck will be 1,100 pounds lighter and we have a diesel in it," Mr. Batey said, at a Bank of America Merrill Lynch conference in New York Wednesday. GM has broken with the direction of Ford and Chrysler. Executives believe they can capture more buyers with three sizes of trucks, rather than just the full-size and heavy-duty options that its competitors are using.

Separately, Mr. Batey said GM has begun repairing the first of 2.3 million vehicles recalled for a flawed ignition switch that could accidentally turn off a car, cutting power to air bags, that has been connected to at least 13 deaths. Mr. Batey said that GM sales in the U.S. are "robust" and haven't been hurt by the recall so far.

Write to Mike Ramsey at michael.ramsey@wsj.com

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