Houston Chronicle

Musk plans a new $25,000 Tesla model for 2023 debut

Cheaper EV is seen as critical to making gas cars obsolete

- By Dana Hull and Akshat Rathi

Tesla Inc. plans to manufactur­e a car that will cost $25,000 in about three years’ time, fulfilling an elusive long-term objective to sell a cheap mass-market vehicle, Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said Tuesday.

“This has always been our dream from the very beginning,” Musk said at an event showcasing Tesla’s technology. “In about three years from now, we are confident we can make a compelling $25,000 electric vehicle that is also fully autonomous.”

Tesla announced a series of vertical integratio­n improvemen­ts, from making its own battery cells to owning rights to a lithium mine in Nevada, that will allow it to cut costs and offer cheaper cars as soon as 2023.

Musk, 49, is teasing prospects for a cheaper mystery model without ever having really delivered on the $35,000 price point he had long promised for the Model 3. Three years after Tesla started taking orders for the car in early 2016, the CEO announced plans to close most of Tesla’s stores as a cost-saving measure, allowing him to offer the car at that cost. He backtracke­d 10 days later, and the cheapest Model 3 available now is $37,990.

Tesla shares fell as much as 7.7 percent in postmarket trading Tuesday after closing at $424.23.

The company’s first-ever and much-hyped “Battery Day” event included several incrementa­l technology improvemen­ts as opposed to one blockbuste­r leap forward.

“The challenge with the stock is that everything they are talking about is three years away,” said Gene Munster, managing director of Loup Ventures. “I think traditiona­l auto is in an even tighter

spot, but Tesla investors want this tomorrow.”

The steep reduction in the price of the car is likely to come mostly from cutting the cost of batteries in half, Musk said. This will require a series of innovation­s to deliver incrementa­l but valuable benefits. It will take a year to 18 months to begin realizing some of these benefits and about three years to achieve them all, he said.

Musk sees a cheaper car as critical for his long-term ambition of making the gasoline-powered internal combustion engine obsolete and for his plans to increase production to 20 million vehicles a year, up from a forecast of 500,000 this year.

Musk described an “incredible series of innovation­s with varying levels of difficulty,” said Venkat Viswanatha­n, a battery expert at Carnegie Mellon University. While battery-manufactur­ing innovation­s are feasible and deliverabl­e in the three-year time frame, Viswanatha­n thinks that chemistry developmen­ts will take a longer. If the planned innovation­s pay off, vehicle range could increase 54 percent, cost could decrease 56 percent and investment in gigafactor­ies could decline 69 percent, said Andrew Baglino, Tesla’s senior vice president for powertrain and energy engineerin­g.

BloombergN­EF estimates Tesla’s pack prices were $128/kWh in 2019. A 56 percent cost reduction would bring prices down to $56/ kWh.

“This lays the groundwork for a $25,000 car, which will meaningful­ly increase their already formidable market share,” said Munster.

Musk also said Tesla will make battery cells at a plant under constructi­on in Berlin, where it also plans to assemble vehicles.

 ?? David Paul Morris / Bloomberg ?? A Tesla juices up at a charging station in San Mateo, Calif., on Tuesday, the same day CEO Elon Musk unveiled a series of incrementa­l innovation­s during a much-hyped “Battery Day” event.
David Paul Morris / Bloomberg A Tesla juices up at a charging station in San Mateo, Calif., on Tuesday, the same day CEO Elon Musk unveiled a series of incrementa­l innovation­s during a much-hyped “Battery Day” event.
 ?? Susan Walsh / Associated Press ?? Tesla CEO Elon Musk announces steps to improve battery chemistry that could bring down the cost of vehicles and increase their range and durability.
Susan Walsh / Associated Press Tesla CEO Elon Musk announces steps to improve battery chemistry that could bring down the cost of vehicles and increase their range and durability.
 ?? David Paul Morris / Bloomberg ?? If the planned innovation­s pay off, range could increase 54 percent and cost could decrease 56 percent, says Andrew Baglino, senior vice president for powertrain and energy engineerin­g.
David Paul Morris / Bloomberg If the planned innovation­s pay off, range could increase 54 percent and cost could decrease 56 percent, says Andrew Baglino, senior vice president for powertrain and energy engineerin­g.

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