Walmart has revealed that it will be reserving and ordering 15 of the new Tesla semi trucks - with 5 slated for use in the US and 10 in Canada. And the Canada-based grocery chain Loblaw has revealed that it will be reserving and ordering a total of 25 of the new all-electric Tesla heavy-duty trucks. Loblaw is currently working towards a goal of possessing an all-electric corporate fleet by 2030.
As a reminder here, reservation deposits for the Tesla semi trucks total $5,000 a piece.
While
the order of 15 trucks from Walmart is notable, it clearly just amounts
to the firm putting its foot in the water, so to speak, as the
company's US truck fleet is now comprised of around 6,000 units.
Reuters provides
more: "The early orders reflected the uncertainty about how the market
for electric commercial vehicles will develop. About 260,000 Class-8
trucks are produced in North America annually, and that market has a
value of about $28.6 billion, said Don Ake, vice president of commercial
vehicles at FTR, an industry economics research firm.
"The
500-mile (800 km) range between charges that Tesla Chief Executive Elon
Musk promised on Thursday for the Tesla Semi is about half the range
between fill-ups of a diesel Class 8 truck. Heavy batteries cut payload
and add cost, potential deal killers for fleet buyers focused on
operating cost per mile."
So,
clearly, there are notable limits to Tesla's semi trucks as of now, but
obviously major benefits as well - greatly reduced emissions being an
important one. On that note, it'll be interesting to see if Tesla can
garner interest for the semi trucks in China, despite being an outsider,
as there's expected to be a rapid shift away from diesel and
petrol/gasoline powered trucks there over the coming decade or two. But
maybe BYD and other Chinese players have that market locked.
article from: cleantechnica.com
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