36.3 C
Washington

Tesla owners can now dread GM drivers piling into Supercharger stations, too

Date:

Share:



Tesla owners learned late last month that they’ll have to share sometimes crowded Tesla Supercharging stations with anyone driving Ford electric vehicles. Today they learned that GM’s EV customers will be able to use the recharge spots, as well. 

Tesla CEO Elon Musk and his GM counterpart Mary Barra made the announcement today in a Twitter Spaces event.

Many Tesla owners have already been complaining that the stations are too congested—even without an influx of drivers from competing automakers. Earlier this year, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tesla drivers being frustrated by the crowds and dreading the possibility of Tesla opening the charging network to rivals. 

For Tesla, opening the network helps it qualify for a share of billions of federal dollars on offer to improve the experience of charging EVs in America. In February, as part of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law’s $7.5 billion investment in EV charging, the White House announced a “set of actions aimed at creating a convenient, reliable and Made-in-America electric vehicle (EV) charging network so that the great American road trip can be electrified.” It said that Tesla would for the first time “open a portion of its U.S. Supercharger and Destination Charger network to non-Tesla EVs.”

Under the deal announced today, GM drivers will get access to Tesla’s 12,000 or so Supercharger stations early next year. That mirrors the news from Ford.

Both GM and Ford also both agreed to adopt Tesla’s connector standard, the North American Charging Standard (NACS), in a blow to the current industry-standard CCS. Musk replied today to a tweet reading “RIP CCS” with:

“Thank goodness! North America will have a way better connector for charging cars than rest of world.”

A key barrier to more widespread EV adoption in the U.S. is a dearth of charging access, so the Ford and GM arrangements with Tesla will likely spur growth in the sector. 

“Excited for what this partnership means for our customers and the industry,” Barra tweeted today.

But as one Tesla owner in Seattle told the Journal, “That’s the one thing that concerns me—whether it might add to congestion…they really need to put more Superchargers in.”

Tesla continues to expand the network, but in the short term, Tesla drivers can expect longer wait times as unfamiliar vehicles join them at stations early next year.

Subscribe to Well Adjusted, our newsletter full of simple strategies to work smarter and live better, from the Fortune Well team. Sign up today.





Source link

Subscribe to our magazine

━ more like this

Paramount Global special committee backs merger with David Ellison’s Skydance Media

David Ellison inched closer to an acquisition of Paramount Global, the owner of MTV and CBS, as a special committee of the company’s...

Hedge funds have no idea what to do about Tesla as shares rally while Trump, tariffs, and backlash against ‘woke’ EVs all loom

Hedge funds piled into short bets against Tesla Inc. right before the electric vehicle maker unveiled a set of numbers that triggered a...

Texas braces for Beryl as storm threatens to regain hurricane strength before making landfall

Beryl began lashing Texas with rain and intensifying winds Sunday as coastal residents boarded up windows, left beach towns under evacuation orders and...

Euro falls as France’s left wing looks to score stunning election victory, raising fears of more spending and deeper deficits

The euro fell after initial projections in France’s legislative elections pointed to a shock victory for the leftist alliance, whose campaign for a...

Lumber prices are near all-time lows but could be headed for a rebound, executive says. ‘We are extremely, extremely cheap’

After dipping below post-pandemic lows this past week, inflation-adjusted lumber prices are approaching their all-time lows and are 20%-30% below production costs, according...