Houston Chronicle

Tesla wants to put the pedal down on electrifyi­ng long-haul trucks

- By Dee-Ann Durbin

After more than a decade of making cars and SUVs — and, more recently, solar panels — Tesla wants to electrify a new type of vehicle: big trucks.

The company unveiled its new electric semitracto­r-trailer this week night near its design center in Hawthorne, Calif.

CEO Elon Musk said the semi is capable of traveling 500 miles on an electric charge — even with a full 80,000-pound load — and will cost less than a diesel semi considerin­g fuel savings, lower maintenanc­e and other factors. Musk said customers can put down a $5,000 deposit for the semi now and production will begin in 2019.

“We’re confident that this is a product that’s better in every way from a feature standpoint,” Musk told a crowd of Tesla fans gathered late Thursday for the unveiling. Musk didn’t reveal the semi’s price.

Even so, the company already is starting to get orders. Walmart, the world’s largest retailer, said Friday that it has preordered five Tesla units in its U.S. division and 10 units at Walmart Canada. Midwest retailer Meijer said it has reserved four trucks. And Arkansas trucking company J.B. Hunt said it has reserved “multiple” tractors that it will deploy on the West

Coast but didn’t specify how many.

The truck will have Tesla’s Autopilot system, which can maintain a set speed and slow down automatica­lly in traffic. It also has a system that automatica­lly keeps the vehicle in its lane. Musk said several Tesla semis will be able to travel in a convoy, autonomous­ly following each other.

Musk said Tesla plans a worldwide network of solar-powered “megacharge­rs” that could get the trucks back up to 400 miles of range after charging for only 30 minutes.

The move fits with Musk’s stated goal for the company of accelerati­ng the shift to sustainabl­e transporta­tion. Trucks account for nearly a quarter of transporta­tion-related greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S., according to government statistics.

But the semi also piles on more chaos at the Palo Alto, Calif.-based company. Tesla is way behind on production of the Model 3, a new lower-cost sedan, with some customers facing waits of 18 months or more. It’s also ramping up production of solar panels after buying Solar City Corp. last year. Tesla is working on a pickup truck and a lower-cost SUV and negotiatin­g a new factory in China. Meanwhile, the company posted a record quarterly loss of $619 million in its most recent quarter.

On Thursday night, Tesla surprised fans with another product: An updated version of its first sports car, the Roadster. Tesla says the new Roadster will have 620 miles of range and a top speed of 250 mph. The car, coming in 2020, will have a base price of $200,000.

Musk, too, is being pulled in many directions. He leads rocket maker SpaceX and is dabbling in other projects, including high-speed transit, artificial intelligen­ce research and a new company that’s digging tunnels beneath Los Angeles to alleviate traffic congestion.

“He’s got so much on his plate right now. This could present another distractio­n from really just making sure that the Model 3 is moved along effectivel­y,” said Bruce Clark, automotive analyst at Moody’s.

Tesla’s semi is venturing into an uncertain market. Demand for electric trucks is expected to grow over the next decade as the U.S., Europe and China all tighten their emissions regulation­s. Electric truck sales totaled 4,100 in 2016, but are expected to grow to more than 70,000 in 2026, says Navigant Research.

But most of that growth is expected to be for smaller, medium-duty haulers

Tesla faces stiff competitio­n from long-trusted brands like Daimler, which unveiled its own semi prototype last month.

like garbage trucks or delivery vans. Those trucks can have a more limited range of 100 miles or less, which requires fewer expensive batteries. They can also be fully charged overnight.

Long-haul semi trucks, on the other hand, would be expected to go greater distances, and that would be challengin­g. Right now, there’s little charging infrastruc­ture on global highways. Without Tesla’s promised fast-charging, even a mid-sized truck would likely require a two-hour stop, cutting into companies’ efficiency and profits, says Brian Irwin of the consulting firm Accenture.

Irwin says truck companies will have to watch the market carefully, because tougher regulation­s on diesels or an improvemen­t in charging infrastruc­ture could make electric trucks more viable very quickly. Falling battery costs also will help make electric trucks more appealing.

But even lower costs won’t make trucking a sure bet for Tesla. It faces stiff competitio­n from long-trusted brands like Daimler, which unveiled its own semi prototype last month.

“These are business people, not fans, and they will need convincing that this truck is better for their balance sheet than existing technology,” said Rebecca Lindland, an analyst at Kelley Blue Book.

Musk said Tesla will guarantee the semi’s powertrain for 1 million miles to help alleviate customers’ concerns.

 ?? Tesla via Associated Press ?? This photo provided by Tesla shows the electric semitracto­r-trailer the company unveiled this week.
Tesla via Associated Press This photo provided by Tesla shows the electric semitracto­r-trailer the company unveiled this week.
 ?? Tesla via Associated Press ?? This is the interior overview of the new electric semitracto­r-trailer from Tesla. The company didn’t reveal the semi’s price.
Tesla via Associated Press This is the interior overview of the new electric semitracto­r-trailer from Tesla. The company didn’t reveal the semi’s price.

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