Tesla Model 3 Configurator Opens In Denmark — Most Expensive Starting Price Of Any Market Yet

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Published on December 23rd, 2018 |

by Jesper Berggreen

Tesla Model 3 Configurator Opens In Denmark — Most Expensive Starting Price Of Any Market Yet

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December 23rd, 2018 by Jesper Berggreen

Receiving an email from Tesla on the 21st of December 2018 was the most exhilarating experience since I put down 10,000 DKK ($1,500) for a place in the queue on the 1st of April 2016, but the kick I got turned out to be a kick in the face. The starting price for a Tesla Model 3 in Denmark is — as far as I can tell — the highest in any market yet, and thus a whole lot more than I had hoped for.

Before I show you the numbers, I must admit that I fully understand Tesla’s strategy, because the European market is going to be huge for Tesla with the Model 3 entering the scene. This car is going blow the market to pieces. Right now the Renault Zoe, Nissan Leaf, VW e-Golf, and BMW i3 are quietly struggling to be on top, but that all ends with the Model 3. So, Tesla has to start as slow as it can in order to keep up later.

I went to look at the Model 3 first hand at the Tesla dealer here in Aarhus. It was a beautiful red multi-coat Long Range AWD version (I fit perfectly in the driver’s seat I might add). I asked the sales attendant how things were going with the orders just a few hours after the initial batch of emails were out. He could not give me any specifics, but he said his personal opinion was positive.

Clever dude. No specific information, but I could tell from his radiant smiling face that lots of Danes where clicking the order button!

Anyway, there I was, having realized that my wait was not over, by any stretch of my imagination. Here’s why:

Denmark Tesla Model 3 Long Range AWD price without enhanced autopilot

That’s $70,785 for the black Dual Motor Long Range Model 3, which is the cheapest possible Tesla Model 3 without Enhanced Autopilot and before savings in Denmark right now. That’s for delivery in February/March. The price includes 25% VAT and — just to rub salt in the wound — $500 in registration tax.

This is more than a black Model 3 Performance with Enhanced Autopilot in the USA, which comes in at $70,000:

USA Tesla Model 3 Performance price with enhanced autopilot

Now, I do not mean to be whining about this too much, because I honestly have trouble finding enough cash for any EV right now, and I do understand the reason for Tesla to only offer the two top models in Europe at first. The demand is so strong for this car on the Old Continent that if Tesla had started with the Mid Range RWD, it would probably not have been able to keep up. This way, the fortunate folks with cash on hand can say, “Heck, let’s go with the AWD version, even though we don’t really need it,” and thus Tesla evens out the logistics. If I could, I certainly would. If Tesla had made an exception for Denmark and reserved a batch of Mid Range RWD for us, everyone else would have been pissed off.

By comparison, the same black Dual Motor Long Range Model 3 goes for €55,400 ($63,064) in Germany, which has lower VAT (20%) and I believe a €4,000 ($4,553) incentive.

All this just proves two things: Denmark is not a frontrunner in adoption of EVs, but also that all good things come to those who wait, and wait, and wait…

I found a used 2014 Model S 85 online for DKK 350,000 ($54,000). Hmm, maybe…

No, I’ll just wait…

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About the Author

Jesper Berggreen Jesper had his perspective on the world expanded vastly after having attended primary school in rural Africa in the early 1980s. And while educated a computer programmer and laboratory technician, working with computers and lab-robots at the institute of forensic medicine in Aarhus, Denmark, he never forgets what life is like having nothing. Thus it became obvious for him that technological advancement is necessary for the prosperity of all humankind, sharing this one vessel we call planet earth. However, technology has to be smart, clean, sustainable, widely accessible, and democratic in order to change the world for the better. Writing about clean energy, electric transportation, energy poverty, and related issues, he gets the message through to anyone who wants to know better. Jesper is founder of Lifelike.dk.

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Tesla Model 3 Topping Ford Mustang & BMW 3 Series … Model 3 Operational Savings … Jordan Peterson — #CleanTechnica Top 20

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Published on December 23rd, 2018 |

by Zachary Shahan

Tesla Model 3 Topping Ford Mustang & BMW 3 Series … Model 3 Operational Savings … Jordan Peterson — #CleanTechnica Top 20

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December 23rd, 2018 by Zachary Shahan

The most popular stories of the past week here on CleanTechnica included 7 Tesla Model 3 stories, 3 other Tesla stories, 3 other electric car stories, a story about an electric tractor, a climate science story, a couple of renewable energy news pieces, and a bit more. Read on for details and to read any of the hot cleantech stories you missed.

Tesla Model 3 Embarrassing Ford Mustang & BMW 3/4 Series — 8 Charts
Could The Tesla Model 3 Cut Your Car Costs By A Third?
Jordan B. Peterson: Climate Change Denier & Faux Lover Of Science
Tesla Model 3 Comfortable For Nearly 7 Foot Tall NBA Player — #CleanTechnica Interview
John Deere Unveils An Autonomous, Electric Tractor…With A Really Long Extension Cord
How Canadians Open Tesla Model 3 Door Handles When They Freeze Shut
Jay Leno Wonders Why More People Don’t Celebrate Tesla
Now It Can Be Told! Hyundai Kona Electric To Start At $36,450
Tesla Domination Budding, Toyota & Honda Getting Hit By EV Rise In USA — Conquest Sales Charts & Data
1st Chinese Exotic Electric Car — Qiantu K50 — To Hit US Roads
NIO Officially Launches NIO ES8 Battery At NIO Day 2018 — CleanTechnica Report & Pictures
How To Opt Out Of Animal Agriculture & Live Plant Based
NASA Tests Record-Setting Alta Devices Solar Cell On Space Station
A Week Of FUD — #Pravduh About #Tesla Report 15
Investment Firm Newly Covering Tesla: “One of the most dynamic technology innovators over the last 30 years”
Video: How To Remove The Tesla Model 3 Battery Pack
Tesla Model 3 vs. Losing Luxury Gasmobiles … Tesla Model 3 Easter Egg Fun … How To Best Charge A Tesla — #CleanTechnica Top 20
15-Year-Old Greta Thunberg Speaks Truth To Power In Katowice
4 More Reasons That Electric Trucks Are Better Than Diesel Trucks
Renewables Are The Cleanest & The Cheapest

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About the Author

Zachary Shahan Zach is tryin' to help society help itself (and other species). He spends most of his time here on CleanTechnica as its director and chief editor. He's also the president of Important Media and the director/founder of EV Obsession and Solar Love. Zach is recognized globally as an electric vehicle, solar energy, and energy storage expert. He has presented about cleantech at conferences in India, the UAE, Ukraine, Poland, Germany, the Netherlands, the USA, and Canada.

Zach has long-term investments in TSLA, FSLR, SPWR, SEDG, & ABB — after years of covering solar and EVs, he simply has a lot of faith in these particular companies and feels like they are good cleantech companies to invest in. But he offers no professional investment advice and would rather not be responsible for you losing money, so don't jump to conclusions.

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38 Anti-Cleantech Myths

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Yes, You Can Still Get A Tesla Model 3 With The Full Tax Credit & Free Supercharging If You Order Now

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Published on December 22nd, 2018 |

by Paul Fosse

Yes, You Can Still Get A Tesla Model 3 With The Full Tax Credit & Free Supercharging If You Order Now

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December 22nd, 2018 by Paul Fosse

Catherine Elizabeth Riggs (age 2). A Tesla will make you feel like a kid again!

This article will be an update on a bunch of year-end Tesla topics. I’ll cover the latest news on the tax credit, the referral program, availability of inventory cars, the improved financing, the trade-in and delivery process, whether wait for the $35,000 car, and the latest on volunteering at the end of the year at a Tesla Delivery Center.

Tax Credit Update
Tesla put on a blog post yesterday reminding everyone the tax credit is expiring soon.

Full $7,500 Federal EV Tax Credit Expires in Under Two Weeks
The full $7,500 federal tax credit for Tesla customers ends in less than two weeks, and we’re doing everything we can to try to ensure those who order a vehicle today can take delivery by December 31st and take advantage of the savings. To help ensure vehicles are available, we’ve released all our fleet vehicles – like those used for test drives – and vehicles where the original customer can’t take delivery by the end of the year. Our mission is to accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable energy – and to do that, we need to get as many electric vehicles on the road as quickly as possible, which is why we are working around the clock to meet demand before the end of the year.

In addition to the $7,500 tax credit, a number of states offer other electric vehicle incentives for customers. These, combined with the reduced costs of charging your Tesla versus paying for gasoline and a lower overall cost of ownership, result in significant savings for customers and mean our vehicles are even more affordable than some may realize. For example, after factoring in estimated gas savings and government incentives, the effective price of a new Model 3 mid-range Rear Wheel Drive in California is $31,700. In addition to the federal EV tax credit, here are some other state and local/utility incentives you may not be aware of:

California offers a $2,500 state rebate, and PG&E offers an additional $800 rebate for applications submitted on or after January 1, 2019.

Connecticut customers are eligible for a $2,000 rebate for new Model 3 RWD vehicles, as well as exemption from state emissions testing and a reduced vehicle registration fee.

Massachusetts offers rebates up to $2,500 for new EV purchases.

New York offers rebates up to $2,000.

Colorado offers tax credits up to $5,000.

Pennsylvania offers rebates up to $1,750.

For the list of available state and local incentives and qualifications, visit https://www.tesla.com/support/incentives. To order a car online and take delivery by the end of the year, go to www.tesla.com or visit your nearest Tesla store for more information. You can order knowing that if you purchase a car without taking a test drive, you have three days to return it for a full refund.

The tax credit is set to be cut in half from $7,500 to $3,750 as we described here and here. As I stated at the end of November, it isn’t very likely the tax credit will be extended or eliminated. Congress is fighting over a border wall instead of the EV tax credit.

Year
2017
2018
2019

Quarter
Q1-Q4
Q1-Q4
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4

Tax Credit Amount
$7,500
$7,500
$3,750
$3,750
$1,875
$1,875

Referral Program Extended, Yet Again
On December 17, Tesla extended its referral program, offering 6 months of free Supercharging once again for Tesla buyers using a referral code.

If someone you know has helped you by giving you a ride in their car or educated you about the Tesla or EVs in general, please use their code. If that person is me, here is my code: ts.la/paul92237.

Elon Musk has stated several times that free Supercharging is unsustainable, but Tesla keeps extending the offer. Will it be extended into next year? Your guess is as good as mine!

Tesla Model 3 Inventory is Finally Here!
The bad news is that in most parts of the country, it is too late to custom order a Tesla for 2018 delivery (you may be able to still do it in California). The good news for buyers is that Tesla kept the factories running even when there weren’t orders and pre-shipped cars around the country, to all the regions of the country! I called Tesla dealers in Florida, New York City, St. Louis (Missouri), Chicago (Illinois), Houston (Texas), and San Jose (California), and they all had a good selection of colors in Mid Range, All Wheel Drive, and Performance Model 3s. If you want a demo model, those are mostly Performance Model 3s as well as 100D and P100D Model Ss and Model Xs.

The Performance Model 3s get about $1,000 to $2,000 off the price of the car, the Model Ss and Model Xs have a little bigger discount.

When I configured my Model 3 in the late spring, the paperwork/trade-in process was a mess. It took me over a week to get trade-in value (I recommend going to CarMax for a 1 hour appraisal — in my case, I got an extra $400 and Tesla matched the offer) and financing was so slow, so I just got my own. In talking to Tesla now, they can do both the trade-in and the financing in less than a day.

The process is:

1. You order the car you want (either from the website by designing what you want or by calling the store and asking them to send you links to specific inventory models).

2. If you put down a $2,500 deposit, then you take pictures of your trade-in and fill out the credit app.

3. The next day, you test drive the car if you want (or just take it and you have 1 day to return if you have test driven a Model 3 before or 3 days if you haven’t test driven one) and you pick up the car in a few minutes.

They will value the trade-in and arrange your financing for you before you go in. What took weeks for me, they have down to less than a day!

Note: I can’t verify this, but I’ve heard rumors that if you order a low-end car (Mid Range, Black exterior, Black Interior, 18″ wheels) and they don’t have that particular combination, you may get a small upgrade (color or wheels) for free.

They send you a link and this one-page form reserves the car. This is a car that is available on December 21 in St. Louis that an Owner Advisor sent me. Once you have paid the deposit, you have the car reserved and you can schedule delivery in the next day.

Buy Now or Save a Buck a Day Waiting for the Standard Range Model 3?
The Mid Range Model 3s going for under $50,000 will sell out first and there won’t be time to receive more before the end of the year in most parts of the country. So, if you are still waiting for the $35,000 car, read this article for the details about why you won’t save much to wait (it all depends on when the $35,000 car is delivered).

The news that the AWD and performance cars are selling well around the world suggests Tesla might delay the $35,000 car a bit more.

Volunteering at the Delivery Centers
I also asked at several delivery centers if they have a program for volunteers to help with orientation of the vehicles for new customers. They took my name and number and email and will contact me if they need assistance.

Some Tesla Clubs are trying to organize this, but our club in Florida has not gotten a response from Tesla on where and when to help. It’s possible they are going to just use the new 5 minute delivery method and not do extra training this quarter.

In looking at the Tesla Motors Club forum, it confirms the delivery centers are not asking for assistance this quarter.

I do think the cars are so much different than anything else that people do need a 30 minute overview. If you have heard anything about volunteering this quarter end, let me know in the comments below.

Conclusion
This may or may not be the last offer of free Supercharging, but I’m pretty sure that after I cried wolf several times claiming this is your last chance to order a Tesla and get the $7,500 tax credit, this time really is your last chance.

In talking to several owner advisors, the Model 3s under $50,000 are going to go first. If you want one of those, order it as soon as possible. If you want an AWD or Performance model, you can probably wait till next week (maybe). Tesla Sales is closed on Sunday in most locations, closes early on Christmas Eve, and is also closed on Christmas.

Now that it only takes a day to do the paperwork and financing (maybe more if you are in a state that doesn’t allow Tesla to sell cars in your state), if you want to get the full tax credit, I’d order one now, and if you don’t like it, take Elon up on his offer that you can return it in 3 days if you haven’t had a test drive (or in one day if you have test driven one).

You can use my Tesla referral link to get 6 months free Supercharging on a Model S, Model X, or Model 3. Here’s the code: https://ts.la/paul92237

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About the Author

Paul Fosse I've been a software engineer for over 30 years, first working on EDI software and more recently developing data warehouse systems in the telecommunications and healthcare industry. Along the way, I've also had the chance to help start a software consulting firm and do portfolio management for several investment trusts. In 2010, I took an interest in electric cars because gas was getting expensive. In 2015, I started reading CleanTechnica and took an interest in solar, mainly because it was a threat to my oil and gas investments in my investment trusts. Tesla investor. Tesla referral code: https://ts.la/paul92237

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Canada Man Drives On Sunshine With Solar & His Tesla Model 3

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Published on December 13th, 2018 |

by Kyle Field

Canada Man Drives On Sunshine With Solar & His Tesla Model 3

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December 13th, 2018 by Kyle Field

A man from Oliver in Canada is living the future today, powering his new Tesla Model 3 with a rooftop solar installation on his home.

Russell Work spoke to the folks at his local paper, the Oliver Chronicle, about his new Tesla Model 3 and how he has installed a Tesla solar system to power it. Russell made the switch to live a more sustainable life, powered by renewables. When he was finally ready to pull the trigger on his purchase, he opted for a cherry red All-Wheel Drive Tesla Model 3 Performance.

Not his Model 3. Not Canada.

“I told him it’s like pouring sunshine straight into his car,” installer Dave Malmberg of Argon Electrical & Solar Services said. “We’re going to see an increase in the very near future for these types of installations to power our cars. We’re just at the beginning (tip of the iceberg) of the EV and solar markets here in B.C. and Canada.”

Russell said that he believes Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk is a visionary who has assembled a crack team of engineers that built the Model 3 as the ideal electric vehicle, from the ground up. “What was interesting is he did not hire automotive engineers; he basically gave them a blank piece of paper and said, ‘Design me the best electric car that you can,’” Work said.

What’s great is that Work did not purchase his Model 3 Performance to save money, but to reduce his carbon footprint as a way to take action against catastrophic climate change — the top reason many people go electric. That sentiment carries through into his house as well. “We’ve made every effort possible in this house to reduce our energy footprint,” Work said.

He is clearly excited about his conversion to sustainable energy and transportation and it’s not just because it’s fun to drive. “So far we have saved the equivalent of 4,000 kilograms of CO2, and that is equivalent to 14 trees having been planted.”

The 29.3 kW solar installation on his roof was not cheap, at $23,000, but supplies enough power for his home and his electric car. At that rate, he expects that the system will take about 11 years to pay off completely, at which point the power it produces will effectively be free.

It is easy to read articles here on CleanTechnica and to forget that most of the solutions we cover can be purchased and used most places in the world today. You can order a Tesla vehicle and a Tesla solar system with energy storage today and be living a more renewably-powered life. Granted, a bike is cheaper and healthier, so if that works best for your lifestyle, jump on and get moving.

Change is coming, but it will come faster if we all do our part sooner rather than later.

If you enjoy the content here on CleanTechnica and are looking to purchase a new Tesla, feel free to use my referral link (here).

Related: Electric Car Drivers: Desires, Demands, & Dreams — New CleanTechnica Report

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About the Author

Kyle Field I'm a tech geek passionately in search of actionable ways to reduce the negative impact my life has on the planet, save money and reduce stress. Live intentionally, make conscious decisions, love more, act responsibly, play. The more you know, the less you need. TSLA investor. Tesla referral code: http://ts.la/kyle623

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Tesla’s Jerome Guillen Talks Gigafactory 1 & Working For Elon With 60 Minutes

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Published on December 10th, 2018 |

by Kyle Field

Tesla’s Jerome Guillen Talks Gigafactory 1 & Working For Elon With 60 Minutes

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December 10th, 2018 by Kyle Field

60 Minutes spent some time with Tesla’s leadership over the last few weeks, including a sit-down with Tesla President of Automotive, Jerome Guillen, at Tesla’s Gigafactory 1 in Sparks, Nevada. The lighthearted interview touches on the current state of the Gigafactory and gets into what it’s like to work directly with Elon Musk. This perspective comes from someone who has been a clutch player on the Tesla team for the last 8 years.

Engineering Fundamentals
Jerome Guillen isn’t your typical business leader. Much like Elon Musk, he built up his own core competency in hardcore engineering, holding a doctoral degree in engineering from the University of Michigan. Before coming to Tesla, Jerome cut his teeth at Daimler subsidiary Freightliner before stepping up to lead central projects at Daimler, like the launch of its carsharing service, car2go.

Since joining Tesla, Jerome has led the Model S program, led the Tesla Service program, led the Tesla Semi program, and most recently, led the Model 3 program, including the establishment of the General Assembly 4 line — also known as the line in the tent.

I Dream In Giga
As anyone familiar with the company knows, the core of Tesla’s business is batteries. The company does happen to sell batteries in some sexy packages, like automobiles and cutting edge stationary energy storage products, but no joy can be had without thousands millions billions of lithium-ion batteries being produced first. Tesla has taken its battery business to the next level with Gigafactory 1, which Jerome shared already builds more batteries than the rest of the world combined. What’s mind blowing about that is that Gigafactory 1 as it stands today is only 30% complete.

That hurts my brain, but means that Tesla has plenty of room to grow at Gigafactory 1. The factory churns out gigawatt-hours of batteries thanks to endless hours of work put in by the 7,000 employees there and a few hundred robots. The video of the interview with Jerome shows some of Tesla’s battery cell conveyors that move the individual cells around in their own little conveyor carts. The segments remind me of minecarts from Minecraft.

The mainstream media focused its coverage on the Model 3 production ramp because that’s where the more visually exciting elements of the Model 3 are built, assembled, painted, and the like, but an equal amount of effort went into expanding and improving operations at Gigafactory 1.

Gigafactory 1 is where every 2170 battery cell that went into a Model 3 was put together. They also bundle up those cells into the battery modules and battery packs that power each car. The Gigafactory is the unsung hero in the Model 3 production ramp and it is clear that it will continue to be the backbone for Tesla’s projects moving forward, particularly since its Fremont, California, automobile factory is approaching or at full capacity.

Jerome said that the Gigafactory was a key component of Tesla’s strategy, since building everything in a single factory is seen as critical in lowering the cost of production as the company pushes for increasingly more affordable electric vehicles.

Working With Elon
Jerome also touched on his relationship with Elon in the interview, noting that Elon was not alone in asking for the impossible from his team during the Model 3 production ramp. Jerome was also pushing the team. That included long hours for Jerome, but no sleeping at the factory for him. While at the Gigafactory, Elon actually slept on the roof of the facility. Jerome said that the views up there are amazing but that “it gets a little cold at night,” with a laugh.

Keeping with the spirit of the 60 Minutes interview with Elon, she asked if Elon was just there as a cheerleader. The question speaks to either her lack of background prep on Elon or a desire to poke and prod at the raw edges just to provoke a response that might earn some headlines. Either way, it’s awkward, but Jerome said Elon is a leader and that he never seems to stop pushing:

“It’s always at the limit of the comfort zone. This is what it takes. What we’re trying to do is very difficult and it’s not going to happen just by cruising. There’s a lot of innovation, a lot of technology, and we are doing this to make the vehicle less expensive so more people can afford them and more people can drive electric,” Jerome said.

He closes by reinforcing the reason Tesla exists. They are doing all of this to make electric vehicles more affordable so more people can drive electric. It is so different than the way any other company operates and yet it just makes so much sense. We need revolutionary products and solutions and that’s what Tesla is bringing to market, but it requires painstaking, difficult, world-changing work. At the end of the day, Jerome is still able to smile and seems to enjoy doing what he’s doing at Tesla.

Source: 60 Minutes via Reddit

Related Stories:

The Curious Case of Jerome Guillen, Tesla Semi Trucks, & Nikola One

“The Fixer” — Tesla’s New President

Tesla President Jerome Guillen Lays Out Path Forward For Gigafactory 1

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Or you can buy a cool t-shirt, cup, baby outfit, bag, or hoodie or make a one-time donation on PayPal to support CleanTechnica’s work.

About the Author

Kyle Field I'm a tech geek passionately in search of actionable ways to reduce the negative impact my life has on the planet, save money and reduce stress. Live intentionally, make conscious decisions, love more, act responsibly, play. The more you know, the less you need. TSLA investor. Tesla referral code: http://ts.la/kyle623

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Elon Axios Interview: How Model 3 Production Ramp Almost Killed Tesla, The Massive AI Threat, & Moving To Mars

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Published on November 26th, 2018 |

by Steve Hanley

Elon Axios Interview: How Model 3 Production Ramp Almost Killed Tesla, The Massive AI Threat, & Moving To Mars

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November 26th, 2018 by Steve Hanley

On Sunday night, an Axios interview with Elon Musk aired on HBO. If you don’t have an HBO subscription, you might want to get one. It is, as the expression goes, “appointment TV.” That is, it offers programs too good to miss. But in case you did, here are three takeaways from the program.

How The Model 3 Almost Killed Tesla
Earlier this year, as Tesla began ramping up production of the Model 3, Musk told Axios the company came within a few weeks of going out of business. Tesla “faced a severe threat of death. Essentially, the company was bleeding money like crazy and just … if we didn’t solve these problems in a very short period time, we would die. And it was extremely difficult to solve them.” Asked how close the company came to actually shutting down, Musk replied, “I would say within single-digit weeks.”

Musk’s notes about living, sleeping, and eating at the factory during that stressful time have become a bit of a joke on the internet, but Musk says it was no joke for him personally. “I was in the paint shop, body shop … end of [the] line where we do final check out of vehicles,” he said. “I personally redesigned the whole battery pack production line and ran it for three weeks. Pretty intense.”

“I think what a lot of people don’t understand is that I’m like the chief engineer like that. I actually do lead engineering of the rockets and lead the engineering of the vehicles and production. Ninety percent of my day is spent on engineering and production.

“No one should put this many hours into your work. This is not good. People should not work this hard. This is very painful. It hurts, it hurts my brain and my heart. It hurts. … There were times when I was working literally 120 hours. This is not recommended for anyone. I just did it because if I didn’t do it, then [there was a] good chance Tesla would die.”

The Existential Threat From Artificial Intelligence
When the topic turned to artificial intelligence, Musk’s remarks took on a somber tone. “My faith in humanity has been a little shaken this year. But I’m still pro-humanity. We’re like children in a playground. … We’re not paying attention. We worry more about … what name somebody called someone else than whether AI will destroy humanity. That’s insane.”

He worries that AI will soon outstrip human intelligence, rendering humans subservient to digital masters. AI is “just digital intelligence,” he summarizes. “And as the algorithms and the hardware improve, that digital intelligence will exceed biological intelligence by a substantial margin. It’s obvious.”

“When a species of primate, homo sapiens, became much smarter than other primates, it pushed all the other ones into a very small habitat,” Musk said. “So there are very few mountain gorillas and orangutans and chimpanzees — monkeys in general. They occupy small corners of the world — cages, zoos. Even the jungles that they’re in are narrowly defined so they were sort of like big cages. So, you know, that’s one possible outcome for us.”

Musk has founded Neuralink, a company that is working on finding ways to interface the human brain with computers, which he sees as a way of preventing pure AI from dominating the human race. Neuralink is comprised of about 85 of the “the highest per capita intelligence” engineers ever assembled. “The long term aspiration with Neuralink would be to achieve a symbiosis with artificial intelligence. To achieve a sort of democratization of intelligence, such that it is not monopolistically held in a purely digital form by governments and large corporations.”

What is he talking about, exactly? An “electrode-to-neuron interface at a micro level — a chip and a bunch of tiny wires implanted in your skull. I believe this can be done — It’s probably on the order of a decade.”

In a way, we are already halfway to such a reality, Musk says. “And by the way, you kind of have this already in a weird way. You have a digital tertiary layer in the form of your phone, your computers, your watch. You basically have these computing devices that form a tertiary layer on your cognition already.”

One of the first applications for the technology could be helping people with spinal cord injuries. “We already know how to do this. Implant electrodes into the motor cortex of the brain, then bypass the severed section of the spine and have effectively local micro controllers near the muscle groups. It could restore full limb functionality. As people get older, they lose their memory — incredibly sad to have a mother forget her children, and that can be solved too.”

Then the conversation turned darker. “You could make a swarm of assassin drones for very little money. By just taking the face I.D. chip that’s used in cell phones, and having a small explosive charge and a standard drone, and just have it do a grid sweep of the building until they find the person they’re looking for, ram into them and explode. You could do that right now. No new technology is needed.”

Even scarier to Musk is the ability of AI to impact the electoral process, something America should be wary of as the revelations about Facebook and the 2016 presidential election continue to emerge. He warns us about the power of AI to create “incredibly effective propaganda … influence the direction of society … influence elections.” It can hone a message by watching online feedback and reacting to news, then making the message “slightly better within milliseconds.”

The government is largely blind to the threat, Musk says, and hopelessly behind in its feeble attempts to control AI. “The way in which regulation is put in place is slow and linear. And we are facing an exponential threat. If you have a linear response to an exponential threat, it’s quite likely the exponential threat will win. That, in a nutshell, is the issue.”

Is Mars An Escape Hatch For The Rich?
Musk told Axios there is a 70% chance he will be one of the people who travels to Mars aboard a SpaceX rocket in the future. He thinks the first trip could happen within 7 years. A ticket to Mars could cost as little as “a couple hundred thousand dollars,” a sum some suggest will make Mars an “escape hatch” for wealthy people as the Earth warms to the point where it can no longer sustain human life.

Musk scoffs at that idea. “Your probability of dying on Mars is much higher than earth. Really, the ad for going to Mars would be like Shackleton’s ad for going to the Antarctic. It’s gonna be hard. There’s a good chance of death, going in a little can through deep space.”

Once someone arrives there, it will not be a life of leisure, reclining by the pool and eating bonbons. “You’ll be working nonstop to build the base. So, you know, not much time for leisure. And even after doing all this, it’s a very harsh environment. So there’s a good chance you die there. We think you can come back, but we’re not sure. Now, does that sound like an escape hatch for rich people?”

So, why go? “There’s lots of people who climb mountains. People die on Mount Everest all the time. They like doing it for the challenge.”

It is fair to say that Elon Musk is not risk averse. Indeed, he seems to thrive on risk, feed off it, and then actively seek out more. That appetite for skating up to and sometimes over the edge is what separates him from normal mortals. And it may be the factor that allows Musk to save us from ourselves, although there is no guarantee anything can keep people from sowing the seeds of their own destruction and reveling in the process.

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Tesla Autopilot Hits 1 Billion Miles! & Why Tesla Autopilot Is The Top Approach To Autonomy

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Published on November 28th, 2018 |

by Michael Barnard

Tesla Autopilot Hits 1 Billion Miles! & Why Tesla Autopilot Is The Top Approach To Autonomy

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November 28th, 2018 by Michael Barnard

Editor’s note: Tesla just tweeted that Tesla owners have now driven 1 billion miles on Autopilot.

In honor of the milestone (no pun intended), I’m reposting one of my favorite Autopilot articles of all time, a 2015 article by Mike Barnard. Enjoy.

Tesla recently released its Autopilot mode for its cars. It has a fundamentally different intellectual approach to autonomy than Google’s, and it’s superior.

One of my backgrounds is robotics. I spent a year digging my way through PhD theses from robotics programs around the world as I worked on a startup idea for specific applications of swarm-based robots. We got as far as software architecture, simple simulations, 3D modelling of physical robots, and specific applications which had fiscal value. I have some depth here without pretending to be a roboticist, and I’ve continued to pay attention to the field from the outside.

So I feel comfortable in saying that, in general, there are two approaches for robots getting from Point A to Point B.

→ The first is the world map paradigm, in which the robot or a connected system has a complete and detailed map of the world and a route is planned along that in advance accounting for obstacles. Basically, the robot has to think its way past or over every obstacle, which makes for a lot of programming.

Yes, that’s a cat in a shark costume riding a Roomba.

→ The second is the subsumption architecture paradigm, in which a robot is first made so that it can survive environments it will find itself in, then equipped with mechanisms to seek goals. The robot then, without any idea of the map of the world, navigates toward Point B. The robot is robust and can stumble its way through obstacles without any thinking at all. The original Roomba vacuum cleaner was a pure subsumption beast.

Obviously, both have strengths and limitations and obviously, at least to me, a combination is the best choice, but it’s worth assessing Tesla’s vs Google’s choices based on this.

Google is starting from the full world map paradigm. For one of its cars to work, it needs an up-to-date centimetre-scale, 3D model of the entirety of the route it will take. Google’s cars are ridiculously non-robust — by design — and when confronted with something unusual will stop completely. Basically, all intelligence has to be provided by people in the lab writing better software.

Why would Google start with this enormous requirement? Well, in my opinion without having spoken to any of the principals in the decision, it’s likely because it fits their biases and blindspots. Google builds massive data sets and solves problems based on that data with intelligent algorithms. They don’t build real-world objects. And the split I highlighted above in world map vs subsumption paradigms is a very real dividing line in academics and research around robotics. It was very easy for Google and world view robotics researchers to find one another and confirm each others’ biases. Others assert that Google is taking a risk-averse approach by leaping straight to Level Four autonomy, and while I’m sure that’s a component of the decision-making process, I suspect it’s a bit of a rationalization for their biases. It’s also being proved wrong by the lack of Tesla crashes to date, but it is early days.

To be clear, Google cars can do things Teslas currently can’t, at least in the controlled prototype conditions that they are testing. They can drive from Point A to Point B in towns and regions that Google has mapped to centimetre scale, which is basically areas south of San Francisco plus a few demo areas. You can’t get in a Tesla, give it an address, and sit back. These are clear performance advantages of the Google model over current Tesla capabilities, and while not trivial, are enabled by the world map model.

Tesla, on the other hand, is starting with the subsumption model. First, the car is immensely capable of surviving on roads: great acceleration, great deceleration, great lateral turning speed and precision, great collision survivability. Then it’s made more capable of surviving. All the car needs to drive on the freeway is knowledge of the lines and the cars around it. Then it adds cameras to give it a hint about appropriate speed. It has only a handful of survivability goals: don’t hit cars in front of you, don’t let other cars hit you, stay in your lane, change lanes when requested, and it’s safe. Because of its great maneuverability — survivability — it can have suboptimal software because it is more able to get out of the way of bad situations. And it has human backup.

And if that’s where Tesla was stopping, everyone who is pooh-poohing its autonomy would be basically correct. But Tesla isn’t stopping there.

Tesla is leveraging intelligent real-world research assistants to put focused, experienced instincts into its cars. They are called the drivers of the Teslas. Every action the Autopilot makes and every intervention a driver makes is uploaded to the Tesla Cloud, where it’s combined with all of the other decisions cars and drivers are making. And every driver passing along a piece of road is automatically granted the knowledge of what the cars and drivers before them have done. In real time.

So, for example, within a couple of days of downloading, Teslas were already automatically slowing for corners that they took at speed before. And not trying to take confusingly marked offramps. And not exceeding the speed limits in places where the signs are obscured.

Within a couple of days of being available, the first people Cannonballed across the USA in under 59 hours with 96% or so of the driving done by the car. Given Google’s requirements, they would have had to send at least two cars out, one or more with a hyper-accurate mapping functionality, then a day or a week later, when the data was integrated, the actual autonomous car. And there would have been no chance of side trips or detours for the Google car. It literally couldn’t drive on a route that wasn’t pre-mapped at centimetre scale. But the Tesla drivers could just go for it.

People are driving Teslas on back roads and city streets with Autopilot, definitely not the optimum location-only situations that others claim Tesla is limited to. And Teslas haven’t hit anything; in fact, have been recorded as avoiding accidents that the driver was unaware of. Survivability remains very high.

Tesla cars are driving themselves autonomously in a whole bunch of places where Google cars can’t and won’t be able to for years or possibly decades. That’s because Teslas don’t depend on perfect centimetre scale maps that are up-to-date in order to do anything. Subsumption wins over world maps in an enormous number of real-world situations.

Finally, Teslas have a world map. It’s called Google Maps. And Tesla is doing more accurate mapping with its sensors for more accurate driving maps. But Teslas don’t require centimetre-scale accuracy in their world map to get around. They are just fine with much coarser-grained maps which are much easier to build, store, manipulate, and layer with intelligence as needed. These simpler maps combined with subsumption will enable Teslas to drive from Point A to Point B easily. They can already drive to the parkade and return by the themselves in controlled environments; the rest is just liability and regulations.

The rapid leaps in capability of the Autopilot in just a few days after release should be giving Google serious pause. By the time its software geniuses get the Google car ready for prime time on a large subset of roads, Teslas will be able to literally drive circles around them.

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About the Author

Michael Barnard is a C-level technology and strategy consultant who works with startups, existing businesses and investors to identify opportunities for significant bottom line growth in the transforming low-carbon economy. He is editor of The Future is Electric, a Medium publication. He regularly publishes analyses of low-carbon technology and policy in sites including Newsweek, Slate, Forbes, Huffington Post, Quartz, CleanTechnica and RenewEconomy, with some of his work included in textbooks. Third-party articles on his analyses and interviews have been published in dozens of news sites globally and have reached #1 on Reddit Science. Much of his work originates on Quora.com, where Mike has been a Top Writer annually since 2012. He's available for consulting engagements, speaking engagements and Board positions.

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GM May Finally Be Serious About Electric Vehicles

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Published on November 27th, 2018 |

by Frugal Moogal

GM May Finally Be Serious About Electric Vehicles

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November 27th, 2018 by Frugal Moogal

When I saw the news yesterday that GM is closing five plants and laying off nearly 15,000 employees, I was surprised. Not because it was happening, but because this could be an extremely forward looking move by the company.

Before I go on, I feel it’s important to present this article from a business perspective. In other words, what does this mean for GM as a company. The personal story of the people who are losing their jobs aren’t really a consideration in that case, even though obviously they should be.

Having said that, GM like all companies, is in a fight to stay ahead in its industry. Companies don’t make decisions to lay off those people without thinking them through. Even beyond any potential feelings of empathy for the workers, layoffs usually spur poor publicity, and in the case of GM will also create a battle with the auto workers union, neither of which is something the company wants. Yet, the decision to cut positions ultimately is connected to a business strategy that management feels makes the most sense at that given point in time. Sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn’t.

It still negatively impacts those who lost their jobs. But that isn’t the focus of the rest of this article.

With all of that having been said, let’s dig in here for the reasons that GM may have made this move and why now was the right time.

GM Sales: Dropping?
The majority of the articles written about GM’s announcement talk about how GM sales have been dropping, and that’s the reason for the closures. And it’s true, sales dropped 11.1% in Q3 2018 compared to Q3 2017.

But there are a few problems with that. The first is that Q3 2017 was affected by higher than normal sales due to the effects of Hurricane Harvey.

Additionally, the results that GM posted for Q3 2018 were … well, I’m just going to let this article from Automotive News describe it:

“Stronger-than-expected results in China and North America propelled General Motors to a 25 percent increase in pretax profit in the third quarter and net income of $2.5 billion.”

So, sales dropped, but those drops were expected due to unique circumstances, were less of a drop than was anticipated, and GM still managed to improve its profitability. That’s not exactly the sort of results that cause businesses to lay off thousands and discontinue large segments of their market.

It does, however, work as a good scapegoat to changing your business strategy to try to meet a new market.

The SUV is King?
The media seems to have adopted recently that SUVs and crossovers are all that anyone wants now, and I hate it. I could have devoted an entire article to just this, but there are again factors at work here that I feel are driving the shift, so I’m going to try to encapsulate them here.

First, automobiles are lasting longer than ever before. When gas prices rose significantly, the majority of automobiles that were sold were smaller vehicles, many of which are still on the road today and nearly as good as the newer models. As a simple, single data point, the car that I traded in for my Model 3 was a 2008 Nissan Sentra. The 2015 Nissan Sentra looks physically the exact same as my car did.

Right along with this, a dealership makes the majority of its money on used car sales and service, incentivizing dealerships to sell consumers on these cheaper, new-looking sedans instead of directing them into the most recent 100% new model.

On the flip side, if you want a crossover or SUV, there are far fewer old, used options. Remember that when gas prices rose quickly about 10 years ago, people were dumping their SUVs because they could no longer afford to fuel them. Sedans made up the majority of new sales, and the used market had a glut of SUVs that dealers couldn’t give away.

Those used SUVs have aged out of the market — how often do you see Hummers driving around now, for instance — meaning if a driver wants to move into that vehicle segment, chances are she or he is going to be opting for a new vehicle or paying a lot for a used one.

At the same time, 2010 fuel standards are based on the vehicle’s footprint, or size. Thus, a larger vehicle needs to achieve less stringent fuel efficiency than a small vehicle. This example from Wikipedia’s article on Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) explains it perfectly:

“For example, the fuel economy target for the 2012 Honda Fit with a footprint of 40 sq ft (3.7 m2) is 36 miles per US gallon (6.5 l/100 km), equivalent to a published fuel economy of 27 miles per US gallon (8.7 l/100 km), and a Ford F-150 with its footprint of 65–75 sq ft (6.0–7.0 m2) has a fuel economy target of 22 miles per US gallon (11 l/100 km), i.e., 17 miles per US gallon (14 l/100 km) published.”

This gives automakers a few incentives to sell larger vehicles — not just can they charge more for them, but the technology to get them to be CAFE compliant is cheaper.

These two factors I think often go overlooked in the SUV “boom,” and it may be less of a boom than a temporary realignment. The narrative of an SUV surge and changing car buyers tastes is a good excuse by car companies, however, to hold off costly development into new cars.

Electric Vehicles Are A Material Risk to Legacy Automakers
This can’t be understated, yet it seems that the majority of investors haven’t grasped this. Electric vehicles are a material risk to legacy automakers.

The gasoline car market is extremely well developed and competitive. Margins are difficult to come by. GM achieved a $2.5 billion profit based on a margin of about 10% on its vehicles. While $2.5 billion seems like a huge number, GM pays shareholders a significant dividend, hovering near 25% of its expected profits in a year. (Ford’s is around 45%!)

Here’s a weird yet true fact — GM “burned” more cash in Q1 2018 than Tesla did. GM reported an adjusted automotive free cash flow of negative $3.464 billion. Tesla, which pundits were lined up to declare as a cash burning machine after Q1 2018, reported free cash flow of negative $785 million.

I’m highlighting this for a reason. Legacy automakers are having a difficult time creating a compelling electric vehicle that they make money on, and they have to spend significantly more money than Tesla does just to retain their position in the gas car business, a business which is expected to decline as electric vehicle sales increase.

Instead, GM (and every legacy automaker) has been forced into a difficult corner. Developing proper EV tech is not as easy as dropping a battery and electric motor into a car and calling it a day, as Tesla has clearly shown us. In 2010, it was estimated that bringing a new car model to market costs an automaker around $1 billion to $6 billion. I can only assume a whole new architecture would be even more.

Invest too much too soon, accidentally kill your gas car business, and you’ll burn so much money that the company will go bankrupt within a year or two.

Invest too little, and if the market shifts to electric cars that you haven’t yet developed, your margins crash and you burn all your money trying to quickly catch up and create a compelling, high-volume EV.

Is the Model 3 to Blame?
This may sound crazy on the surface, but I don’t think we would have been here without the Model 3 doing what it has done. To keep their smaller cars CAFE compliant, GM has to spend more money to develop better technology, which leads to smaller margins on those cars. A smaller margin on these vehicles means even a minor drop in sales could lead to significant losses.

What could have led to a drop in smaller sedan demand? According to AAA earlier this year, one in five drivers wants an electric car as their next vehicle.

I don’t think it’s a coincidence that both Ford and GM have discontinued huge segments of their sedans in the past seven months. Both companies see mounting development costs for a product that could be rapidly replaced. Ford seems to have no real plan, but GM seems to be trying to meet the challenge head on.

And, it’s going to get worse for legacy automakers soon. By 2020, Tesla will have the $35,000 Model 3 and could be spooling up production for the Model Y and truck. If a large number of buyers hear about these new electric models and decide to hold off purchasing a new gas car to see what is brought to market, that drop alone could be enough to put a legacy automaker that hasn’t created compelling electric options of their own into a tailspin.

Back to Yesterday’s News
This is what makes yesterday’s news so interesting. Most reporters stated that GM is responding to falling sales by focusing on its larger and more popular models.

Looking at the numbers, that isn’t what seemed to happen. GM is discontinuing the Chevy Cruze (31,971 Q3 sales), Impala (16,290), and Volt (5,429), the Buick LaCrosse (2,290), and the Cadillac XTS (4,101) and CT6 (2,281). Of these, both the Volt and XTS actually had increasing sales in Q3.

The Cruze, even with a 27% decrease in sales, was still Chevy’s fifth best selling model, and it accounted for over 6% of all Chevys sold.

We could contribute the decrease in Cruze sales to a lot of things, but if an automaker were to believe that the decrease in sales came partially from buyers holding off until they found a compelling electric car, this might be the time to ditch those models before they bleed too much money. This might be the time to quickly rush the new electric vehicles to market. When automakers suddenly find a luxury-priced sedan is all of a sudden competing on the best selling car list, it may be a wake-up call of sorts.

There isn’t a compelling, reasonably affordable SUV or truck option. Yet. But with the Tesla M..

Tesla Partners With Auction Companies To Manage Used Car Market

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Published on November 27th, 2018 |

by Steve Hanley

Tesla Partners With Auction Companies To Manage Used Car Market

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November 27th, 2018 by Steve Hanley

Car auctions move billions of dollars a year and are essential to the US automobile industry, yet operate out of the public eye. Every week, tens of thousands of used cars get redistributed from dealers and leasing companies to wholesalers and other dealers. The auctions are not open to the public, so very few people know about them, but they provide a means of turning cars in inventory into cash for sellers, and they provide a steady supply of fresh inventory for used car dealers.

Until now, Tesla has been managing its own used car inventory, but as sales of new cars ramp up, there are more Teslas being traded in. As much as Tesla likes to be a vertically integrated company that controls every aspect of its business, established auction houses like Adessa and Manheim are very good at what they do, and so Tesla has contracted with them to help manage its burgeoning supply of used cars, according to CNBC.

The majority of cars that go through the auction process are off-lease vehicles — something that Tesla is starting to have a lot of as leases from 2016 and earlier are just starting to mature. To handle the influx of more used cars — some of which may be trade-ins from other manufacturers or repossessions — Tesla now has postings on Glassdoor for used vehicle quality specialists, a remarketing manager, and used vehicle sales advisors. The company is targeting a “30-day or less turn-rate in the sale of pre-owned inventory.”

Many people have a negative attitude toward cars purchased from auction houses, but in truth, the supply of off-lease cars is the lifeblood of the used car industry. They are typically 2 to 3 model years old with between 30,000 and 50,000 miles on them. They are professionally reconditioned by the auction staff and often cannot be told from new. If you think all 300 used cars in inventory down at your local dealer are local trade-ins, you don’t understand how the used car business in America works.

Because Teslas will now be available at major auctions, that means they will soon start showing up on dealer lots alongside other cars in the used car inventory, meaning people interested in buying a used Tesla will have more options and possibly somewhat lower prices.

The secret to the used car business is turning the inventory. Many of the top used car retailers set 30 days as the maximum time a car can remain on the books. After that, it goes back up for auction. The theory is that it is better to lose a little money now if the proceeds can be reinvested in fresh inventory that will sell quickly and generate a profit later.

When your children ask you for career advice, tell them to become an auctioneer. Those who make it are typically some of the wealthiest people in the community. They get paid a fee by sellers to include their cars in the auction and another fee by buyers when the car sells. Most operate finance companies that loan buyers the money to purchase the cars. They operate inspection and reconditioning services that generate income as well.

Forget being a lawyer or a doctor or even a Wall Street trader. Being an auctioneer is where it’s at. You own nothing and have little overhead. No one dies or goes to jail if you make a mistake. It’s the perfect business for anyone who wants to make a lot of money with minimal headaches.

And it’s addicting. Once a week, the cars start rolling across the auction block at 9:00 am at a rate of 2 per minute until well into the afternoon. The bigger auctions have up to 15 lines running simultaneously and sell as many as 1,500 cars in a day. It’s insane, and crazy good fun. Way better than playing video games in your mom’s basement.

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Tesla Adds Warehouses In Lathrop, California, To Relieve Pressure At Its Fremont Factory

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Published on November 27th, 2018 |

by Kyle Field

Tesla Adds Warehouses In Lathrop, California, To Relieve Pressure At Its Fremont Factory

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November 27th, 2018 by Kyle Field

New Video Highlights Progress At Tesla’s New Facility In Lathrop, California

Tesla has continued its ongoing expansion with the construction of its new Distribution Center in Lathrop, California. The facility sits just over 50 miles from its Fremont factory.

The company originally moved into Lathrop back in 2014 as it fleshed out plans for the then-new Model X. It is now working to expand its footprint in the city to accommodate the surge in volume required for Model 3.

Tesla’s 10K filing with the SEC from 2017 noted that, “We manufacture our vehicles, and certain parts and components that are critical to our intellectual property and quality standards, at the Tesla Factory and our manufacturing facility in Lathrop, CA.” It went on to list 4 warehouse and manufacturing locations in the city, totaling nearly 1.4 million square feet of floor space.

A new YouTube video that was posted on Reddit (featured above) shows that Tesla continues to push into the small city with the construction of another massive facility. The sheer size of the new facility has many speculating that it will come online as a distribution center that will allow Tesla to offload some of the more space-intensive delivery preparation work away from its Fremont manufacturing plant.

As Tesla’s near-term production target of 6,000 Model 3s per week stacks on top of its existing base of 100,000 Model S and X per year, Tesla is pulling out all the stops to roll as many cars as possible through its Fremont factory. Actually, 412,000 vehicles per year is already more than Tesla thought it would produce from the factory, and it now has plans to continue to ramp up Model 3 production to a target rate of perhaps even 10,000 Model 3s per week!

Cramming the production of more than 600,000 vehicles per year into the Fremont factory is going to require a bit of ingenuity, but that’s just business as usual for Tesla, which has built its business on challenging the status quo and redefining normal — one day, one innovation at a time.

Tesla has not announced the North American manufacturing location for its yet to be unveiled electric CUV, the Model Y, but it has admitted that it will need another production facility since Fremont is already bursting at the seams. It recently broke ground on its third full-scale manufacturing facility, dubbed Gigafactory 3, in Shanghai, China — its first production facility in Asia — where it will produce the Model 3 and the Model Y when production begins in 2020.

Though, in the midst of the international expansion, it has largely been ignored that back in Lathrop, California, Tesla continues to ramp up its operations. Dozens of logistics, administrative, and metal-working jobs have been posted in the greater Lathrop region by the California company.

Source: YouTube via Reddit

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About the Author

Kyle Field I'm a tech geek passionately in search of actionable ways to reduce the negative impact my life has on the planet, save money and reduce stress. Live intentionally, make conscious decisions, love more, act responsibly, play. The more you know, the less you need. TSLA investor. Tesla referral code: http://ts.la/kyle623

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Cleantech Press Releases

New Research Shows That Only Two Large Petroleum Companies Have Meaningful Emission Reduction Targets

Koben Announces EVOLVE EVSF —Grid-Friendly Modular EV Store & Forward System

The New Danish Climate Plan — Together For A Greener Future

The EV Safety Advantage

Read & share our free report on EV safety, “The EV Safety Advantage.”

The State of EV Charging

Our 93-Page EV Driver Report

30 Electric Car Benefits

Blockchain × Cleantech

Our Electric Vehicle Reviews

Tesla News

Correcting the Cleantech Record

38 Anti-Cleantech Myths

Wind & Solar Prices Beat Fossils

Cost of Solar Panels Collapses

© 2018 Sustainable Enterprises Media, Inc.

Electric Cars
Electric Car Benefits
Electric Car Sales
Solar Energy Rocks
RSS
Advertise
Privacy Policy

This site uses cookies: Find out more.Okay, thanks