Tools
Change country:

Elon Musk’s EV Empire Is Crumbling

Of late, Tesla’s cars have come to seem a bit hazardous. Their self-driving features have been linked to hundreds of accidents and more than a dozen deaths. Then, earlier this month, the company recalled its entire fleet of Cybertrucks. A mechanical problem that trapped its gas pedal, as InsideEVs put it, “could potentially turn the stainless steel trapezoid into a 6,800-pound land missile.”

Along the way, Tesla—which did not respond to multiple requests for comment—has defended its cars and autopilot software. As of last week, the company told federal regulators that the Cybertruck malfunction had not been linked to any accidents or injuries. But even resolving every safety concern may not stop Tesla’s entire EV business from becoming a hazard. Yesterday afternoon, the world’s most valuable car company released its earnings report for the first quarter of 2024, announcing that its net income had dropped 55 percent from a year ago. On an investor call shortly after, Elon Musk could offer only a vague euphemism to describe what has become an especially disastrous month: His car juggernaut “navigated several unforeseen challenges.” Just in April, Tesla has announced its first drop in sales since 2020, recalled one line of vehicles and reportedly canceled plans for another, and begun mass layoffs. There are still, somehow, six days left for the month to get worse.

Whether Musk can sustain his EV empire is now in doubt. He told investors that Tesla’s primary focus is now on AI and self-driving cars. But even if that pivot fails, the company has positioned itself to be on the edge of another, perhaps more crucial part of the green transition: delivering and storing America’s power. Tesla’s EV chargers are ascendant, if not dominant, as are its huge batteries that store renewable energy for homes and even entire neighborhoods. Profits from Tesla’s energy business were up 140 percent compared with the same period last year, and Musk asserted yesterday that the division will continue to grow “significantly faster than the car business.” The company’s future may not lie in following the footsteps of Ford, then, so much as those of Duke Energy and Con Edison. Tesla, in other words, is transforming into a utility.

Tesla’s core problem has been that its cars are falling behind the curve. Even with sagging sales, the company remains America’s biggest EV manufacturer, and its car sales still far outweigh the revenue it gets from energy storage. But Tesla’s models, once undeniably high-tech and cool, are aging.

The Cybertruck debuted in November, but Tesla has sold only about 4,000 of them, less than the number of F-Series trucks that Ford sells on average in two days. Otherwise, Tesla hasn’t released an entirely new passenger model in more than four years. Its competitors have used the time to catch up. The Chinese brand BYD is pumping out dirt-cheap, stylish cars and recently surpassed Tesla as the world’s leading seller of EVs. BYD’s cars aren’t available in the U.S., but automakers such as Rivian, Hyundai, and Ford are selling high-tech electric cars. Americans now want affordable EV models, not just high-tech ones—and even Tesla’s push to incrementally cut sticker prices hasn’t achieved that. In yet another April debacle, Reuters reported that the company had scrapped a long-anticipated, more affordable model that would have sold for just $25,000. Musk did tell investors yesterday that the company is speeding up the timeline for more affordable vehicles built “on the same manufacturing lines as our current vehicle lineup.” But he did not specify prices and declined to answer a direct question about whether the cheaper cars will be entirely new models or tweaks to existing ones.

[Read: America is missing out on the best electric cars]

The company still has one big advantage in the EV game. No matter their manufacturer, nearly all future EVs in America will rely on Tesla. Just as gas stations were necessary to make the highway system usable, electric charging stations are a key hurdle to wider EV adoption. Tesla’s Superchargers are much faster and more reliable than those of many of their competitors, which is why most major auto manufacturers have declared that they will adopt Tesla’s proprietary charging port in future vehicles. The number of Supercharger stations across the country has increased steadily for years, and is expected to take off this decade.

In a few years’ time, those Tesla Superchargers might all also draw power from Tesla’s batteries, which are the little-known core of the company’s transformation into a power provider. As America continues to pivot to clean energy, storage will become crucial: Solar and wind are and will continue to be the country’s fastest-growing renewables, but the energy grid can’t just turn off at night, on a cloudy day, or when the breeze dies down. Just as Tesla was ahead of the EV-adoption curve more than a decade ago, it is set up to be king of the battery boom.

Since 2019, the company has been selling “Megapacks”—huge batteries that hold enough electricity to temporarily power thousands of homes—to grid operators in New York, Massachusetts, California, Dubai, Australia, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere, as well as to private customers, including Apple. Tesla is continuing to ramp up the factory in California that manufactures these batteries, as well as building another in Shanghai. Until recently, there hasn’t been much competition, and some analysts have predicted that the Megapack business could one day be worth “substantially more” than Tesla’s cars.

[Read: Tesla’s magic has been reduced to its chargers]

Tesla also sells Powerwalls, large batteries designed for home installation. Powerwalls have made up roughly half of all home-battery installations since 2018, and demand is set to explode. The company deployed more than twice as much energy storage in 2023 as in the year prior. Tesla also has a line of solar panels, and though that business has proved fickle, it is yet another way for the company to provide the raw power that an electrified world will require. With its chargers and batteries, Tesla’s main products are becoming infrastructural, a step removed from consumers but no less essential. Vaibhav Taneja, the company’s chief financial officer, said yesterday that energy-storage deployment should grow by at least another 75 percent this year and begin “contributing significantly to our overall profitability.”

That future, of course, is far from preordained. Tesla’s auto business remains one of the few profitable EV operations in the country; Ford and GM are losing billions of dollars on EVs as they retool their companies away from the internal-combustion engine. And, to say the least, Musk is hardly a predictable executive. Yesterday’s earnings call suggested he is more infatuated with self-driving robotaxis than electrifying the grid: He’s doubled Tesla’s AI-training resources in three months. But self-driving cars are the opposite of a safe bet, and semiautonomous vehicles, which have become the industry standard, will no longer set Tesla apart. Clean energy is a highly competitive, capital-intensive, and rapidly changing industry. Just like its massive head start in the EV field, Tesla’s battery and charging advantages will not be self-sustaining.

But absent a far more catastrophic collapse, Tesla appears to be successfully jumping from one wave of the clean-energy revolution to another—from providing cars to providing the electricity that will power not just cars, but also homes, offices, and more or less everything else. A decade from now, even as Tesla vehicles slide in popularity, the company’s influence may prove stronger than ever.


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
  1. Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis on seeing his songs come to life on stage Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis joins "CBS Mornings" to talk about his new Broadway musical, "The Heart of Rock and Roll," and working through hearing loss.
    cbsnews.com
  2. Donald Trump in Bronx Must 'Terrify Democrats': Top Aide The former president recently held a rally in Crotona Park, South Bronx, a historically Democratic district.
    newsweek.com
  3. PM Update: Strong to severe storms possible tonight and on Memorial Day Storms in the D.C. area may be most widespread from about noon to 9 p.m. Monday. Wind damage, large hail, a couple of tornadoes and flooding downpours are possible.
    washingtonpost.com
  4. Letitia James Issues New Warning The New York attorney general warned other cryptocurrency companies to "play by the same rules" following a recent $2 billion settlement.
    newsweek.com
  5. Matt Rempe penalty costs Rangers early in Game 3 vs. Panthers Rempe’s roughing penalty cost the Rangers in the first period, enabling the Panthers to get even at two apiece on the second of Sam Reinhart’s two power-play goals.
    nypost.com
  6. Trump lawyer is worried hush-money jurors will be exposed to ‘Trump derangement syndrome’ over Memorial Day Alina Habba said that jurors should have been sequestered from the public for the holiday weekend ahead of closing arguments this coming week.
    nypost.com
  7. Frustrated Dodgers batters fall to Reds, extend losing streak to five games Dave Roberts said lack of consistency of approach contributed to Dodgers batters' struggles. The team lost 4-0 to the Reds Sunday.
    latimes.com
  8. High school baseball and softball: Southern California Regional playoff pairings High school baseball and softball: Southern California Regional playoff pairings.
    latimes.com
  9. Omar Narvaez’s walk-off hit caps Mets’ ninth-inning rally in badly needed win over Giants All still isn’t great for the Mets, with the NL West-leading Dodgers on deck for three games, but at least a losing streak that had reached five games was declared over.
    nypost.com
  10. ‘Furiosa,’ ‘Garfield’ lead slowest Memorial Day weekend box office in decades Movie theaters are looking more and more like a wasteland this summer. Neither “ Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga ” nor “ The Garfield Movie ” could save Memorial Day weekend, which is cruising towards a two-decade low.
    nypost.com
  11. Angel Reese Responds to Heinous Non-Basketball Play, Embraces Physicality Chicago Sky star rookie Angel Reese embraces and appreciates the phycial play she encountered in her latest matchup.
    newsweek.com
  12. Greg Abbott Gets Scathing Rebuke From Texas Newspaper Several local Texans criticized the governor's decision to pardon U.S. Army Sergeant Daniel Perry in letters published by the Austin American-Statesman.
    newsweek.com
  13. Rangers’ Barclay Goodrow scores again early in Game 3 after OT heroics Barclay Goodrow is having himself a postseason.
    nypost.com
  14. The wurst: NYC’s ‘Hot Dog King’ and Vietnam vet gets shut down again, claims city out to get him "This is not the first time they did it, but this time it's right in front of the Memorial Day weekend," vendor Dan Rossi said, adding the timing of this closure is like "spitting" on veterans both living and dead.
    nypost.com
  15. Presidential candidate Jill Stein slams DNC for posting, deleting ‘Third Party Project Manager’ job Longshot Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein slammed the Democratic National Committee Friday for posting, and then deleting, a job for monitoring third party candidates.
    foxnews.com
  16. Byron Donalds Reacts to MSNBC Host Calling Him 'Fake Proof' The GOP congressman pushed back against MSNBC host Joy Reid's claim that he is "fake proof" of Black people supporting Donald Trump.
    newsweek.com
  17. NYC flooded with illegal flavored vapes from China despite ban to protect kids: study The Big Apple is being flooded with illegal flavored e-vapes made in China after banning the smokes’ sale in 2020 to prevent youths from getting hooked on their addictive nicotine, a new study shows.
    nypost.com
  18. Woman's Simple Home Decor Idea to Create 'Moment in Time' Praised This "aesthetically pleasing" decor idea "felt like a no-brainer" to incorporate into her home, Meg McMillin told Newsweek.
    newsweek.com
  19. ‘We need respect’: Massiel Taveras addresses social media fans after shoving Cannes security guard Dominican actress Massiel Taveras has spoken out on social media after she was filmed shoving a security guard at the Cannes Film Festival. The 39-year-old TV presenter — who was attending the premiere of the French film “The Count Of Monte Cristo” — had reportedly been dazzling onlookers on the red carpet with her extravagant...
    nypost.com
  20. Pro golfer Grayson Murray died by suicide at age 30, parents reveal "It's surreal that we not only have to admit it to ourselves, but that we also have to acknowledge it to the world," they wrote in a statement.
    nypost.com
  21. Jon Berti will be out ‘a while’ in concerning Yankees injury update The infielder, who had crutches and a walking boot at his locker Sunday morning, was just starting to produce more consistently.
    nypost.com
  22. Honoring the real meaning of Memorial Day Readers reflect on friends lost in Vietnam, a visit to Normandy and how summer has eclipsed service.
    washingtonpost.com
  23. Teen stabbed on NJ shore boardwalk, sparking panic on Memorial Day weekend A 15-year-old boy was stabbed on New Jersey’s Ocean City boardwalk Saturday night, spending panicked crowds of beachgoers fleeing the area during the Memorial Day weekend. The idyllic summer vacation spot was turned into a scene right out of a horror movie when an unknown male suspect stabbed the teenager after 9 p.m. on the...
    nypost.com
  24. Tesla shareholders advised to reject Elon Musk’s ‘excessive’ $56 billion pay package Proxy advisory firm Glass Lewis said on Saturday it has urged Tesla shareholders to reject a $56 billion pay package for Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk, which if passed would be the largest pay package for a CEO in corporate America. The report cited reasons like the “excessive size” of the pay deal, the dilutive...
    nypost.com
  25. Former RNC Chair Says to Put Donald Trump's 'Behind in Jail' Trump distorted the language of a search warrant used against him, claiming the Justice Department wanted to use "deadly force."
    newsweek.com
  26. nypost.com
  27. Mets broadcasters perfectly sum up team's massive struggles during latest meltdown: 'Good grief' The New York Mets are reeling and the team's broadcasters perfectly summed up what they, and their fan base, are going through after another late-inning meltdown.
    foxnews.com
  28. Alina Habba's Remarks on Donald Trump Trial Spark Mockery Habba spoke about the importance of jury instructions on Sunday, while taking aim at Trump's hush money trial claiming "there are no facts that support" it.
    newsweek.com
  29. Democratic Rep. blasts ICC as ‘Ministry of Magic’ for Israel warrant push, calls for sanctions Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.) appeared to suggest that President Biden should not have reversed former President Donald Trump's decision to impose sanctions on the ICC.
    nypost.com
  30. ‘Bachelorette’ star Trista Sutter says she’s ‘safe and sound’ amid husband’s cryptic posts about her absence The former reality star revealed that she chose to pursue an "opportunity for perspective and personal growth" that took her away from her family.
    nypost.com
  31. Six skydivers and a pilot parachute to safety before small plane crashes in Missouri They all parachuted out of a small plane before it crashed in Missouri.
    abcnews.go.com
  32. Trump’s well-attended Bronx rally should be ‘wake-up call’ for Biden: Dem ex-Gov. Paterson “This is a wake-up call to the Democratic Party, who just seems to think that you can criticize what Trump did four years ago and that that will be enough," Paterson said on 77 WABC radio's "The Cats Roundtable" show with host John Catsimatidis.
    nypost.com
  33. Fetterman claims credit for freeing American dad who was arrested in Turks and Caicos over ammo in his luggage Sen. John Fetterman was the only Democrat to travel to the British territory as part of a delegation of lawmakers who pushed for the release of five Americans who are all being held for stray bullets in their luggage.
    nypost.com
  34. Morgan Wallen’s new Nashville bar delays opening amid sign controversy The country music star postponed the opening of his Nashville bar after city council members rejected a neon sign with his name, citing his past controversies.
    washingtonpost.com
  35. Kaapo Kakko back in Rangers’ lineup for Game 3 vs. Panthers after Jimmy Vesey injury The 23-year-old has produced two points in 11 playoff games after notching 19 points in 61 regular-season games.
    nypost.com
  36. Bear named 'Oreo' roams Monrovia in search of food — and snags namesake cookies A California black bear visited a residential property on Canyon Crest Drive on Saturday and left with a package of the Nabisco treat.
    latimes.com
  37. Lizzo Weighs in on Being Parodied in Obesity-Themed ‘South Park’ Episode Etienne Laurent/AFP via Getty ImagesLizzo took to TikTok over the weekend to share her reaction to a recent South Park episode that parodied her body-positive message by using her music as an alternative to the trendy weight-loss drug, Ozempic.The “Good as Hell” singer shared her thoughts on the episode in real time, watching the episode while filming a selfie-style “duet” video while pausing the program frequently to weigh in on the comedy cartoon’s writing.“Guys, my worst fear has been actualized,” she began her video Saturday. “I’ve been referenced in a South Park episode. I’m so scared.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
    thedailybeast.com
  38. Nicki Minaj shares update after Amsterdam arrest livestream: ‘I’ll have the lawyers & GOD take it from here’ Nicki Minaj updated fans after she missed a show due to an alleged arrest in Amsterdam for drug possession, which she had livestreamed earlier that day.
    foxnews.com
  39. I’m an ER doctor — don’t bring these 5 foods to the beach "The last thing you want is for people to go home and remember the beach trip because they got sick," Dr. John Torres said.
    nypost.com
  40. For 'Alienist' author Caleb Carr, rescuing a cat meant rescuing himself Caleb Carr, a military historian and bestselling author of "The Alienist," made his last book a touching memoir of life and love with a feline companion.
    latimes.com
  41. Chi-Chi’s margaritas sued for ‘pseudo cocktail’ that has no tequila but a strikingly similar label A group of fed-up margarita enthusiasts is suing the makers of Chi-Chi's margaritas, accusing them of falsely advertising one of their "Original Margarita" products — a malt beverage drink containing no tequila.
    nypost.com
  42. Grieving Golfer Tears Up in Heartbreaking Interview After Grayson Murray’s Death Screenshot/CBSProfessional golfer Peter Malnati gave a heartbreaking, tear-filled interview on CBS Saturday, after the news broke that fellow golfer Grayson Murray had suddenly passed away at the age of 30.“You know, this is, this is gonna be really hard,” Malnati said to CBS Sports’ Amanda Balionis, already visibly choked up.“I didn’t know Grayson all that well but I spent the last two days with him,” Malnati continued, fighting tears. Read more at The Daily Beast.
    thedailybeast.com
  43. Bangladesh evacuates 800,000 as major cyclone approaches The storm is expected to cross Bangladesh and India’s West Bengal coasts around midnight Sunday.
    nypost.com
  44. Jets News: Aaron Rodgers Sends Message to Any New York Fans Doubting Him Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers had a message for any New York fans who may be doubting him.
    newsweek.com
  45. Jax Taylor, 44, grabs lunch with model Paige Woolen, 32, following Brittany Cartwright split The "Valley" star was photographed having a three-hour meal with Woolen at Granville Cafe in Los Angeles on Saturday.
    nypost.com
  46. Grayson Murray once credited ‘beautiful’ fiancée Christiana for helping him through struggles After being open about his battles with depression and alcoholism, Murray said at the time he was in a better place and credited his fiancée as being a reason why.
    nypost.com
  47. PGA Tour golfers honor Grayson Murray with special addition to final round outfits Grayson Murray's parents wanted play to continue despite the death of their son on Saturday, but they requested players honor his Sunday addition with ribbons on their hats.
    foxnews.com
  48. Korean War vet skydives to celebrate 95th birthday: 'I can do that' A former U.S. Marine and Korean War veteran said he wants to celebrate his 95th birthday by doing something his never tried before: skydiving.
    foxnews.com