2023-03-02 | 17:07
The big, giant message Tesla CEO Elon Musk and other execs
tried to impart during its four-hour Tesla Investor Day was how the company
would be the driver of a global shift away from fossil fuels and towards
renewable energy. Investors, at least those active after the market closed,
weren’t impressed perhaps because it lacked that big product announcement,
specific details on the next step in its so-called master plan 3 or Musk’s
signature “one more thing” line.
Shares of Tesla fell 5.66 percent in after-hours trading.
Much of the event was more history lesson than a forecast of
future business — although the nuance was that, of course, all roads lead to
the future. And large sections of the event were dedicated to operational
efficiencies and efforts to reduce cost at virtually every level of company.
(which normally investors like).
Perhaps the most interesting parts are what was not said.
Musk and an unusually long lineup of department leads did not share new details
on Tesla’s next-generation EV and its upcoming factory in Mexico nor did they
address current issues with its Full Self-Driving software that is currently
unavailable to those who opted to buy the $15,000 option due to a recall.
Still, there was some news and insights from the event.
Here’s a roundup highlighting the big stuff.
This isn’t a new goal for Tesla. But a string of executives,
who came on stage to talk about everything from manufacturing and raw materials
to design, charging and batteries, all really tried to prove their case for how
they would reach that goal.
The slide above shows the existing portfolio, the Model S,
Model X, Model Y and Model 3 — as well as the Tesla Semi and the Cybertruck,
and two veiled vehicles.
It’s worth looking at the 20 million vehicles per year
number for a bit of a reality check. Tesla produced 1,369,611 and delivered
1,313,851 vehicles in 2022. Toyota, the global sales leader, sold 10.5 million
vehicles last year.
That means, and follow the math, Tesla would need to
increase its production (and sales mind you) about 15 times from 2022.
So, how will Tesla achieve this? Musk said it’s not a demand
problem (a phrase he has used repeatedly in the past). The tough part is
building the darned things, he said. Tesla’s answers are: vertical integration,
scaling existing factories and building new ones, making the manufacturing
process more efficient and adding a few more models. (But, interestingly, not
too many; Musk said maybe 10 models total).
Vertical integration and slashing costs
Tesla is famous for its constant push towards vertical
integration. It’s the only car company in recent memory that took on making its
own seats, for instance.
That message continued at the investor event, with
executives discussing different pieces of the vertical-integration goal. Tesla
has brought in house already, including building its own chip. But the company
has continued to push the bounds of vertical integration, right down to the software
it uses for in-house operations. Execs said that recently that got rid of an
outsourced software for recruiting to use its own and that it developed its own
purpose-built microprocessor for high-power electronics that will reduce costs
by half.
For Tesla, vertical integration equals cost reductions. And
that’s one of the big aims to achieve that bigger mission.
Lithium plant in Corpus Christi
Tesla has even extended its vertical integration efforts to
the materials it uses in battery cells.
Tesla officially broke ground at a new lithium refinery in
Corpus Christi, Texas, Drew Baglino, senior vice president of powertrain and
energy engineering, confirmed during the event.
During the presentation, Tesla showed a rendering of the 50
gigawatt-hour per year lithium refinery. The company’s messaging around speed
and scale continued with the refinery project, as Baglino noted they’re working
to have it operational by the end of 2023.
“This is a good example of something where we’re basically
talking about breaking ground and and starting commissioning within 10 months
and with actual production within 12 months,” Baglino said. “That’s the
target.”
Musk added later, during a Q&A session, that a cathode
processing facility will eventually be built adjacent to the lithium refinery.
He also noted that the company would prefer if others took on lithium mining.
“We’re doing it because we have to not because we want to,”
Musk said.
Mexico factory
Mexico President Andrés Manuel López Obrador technically broke
the news Tuesday, but Musk reiterated the announcement without sharing any new
details aside from a rendering.
“We’re excited to announce that the next Tesla gigafactory
will be in Mexico near Monterey,” Musk said. “We do want to emphasize we will
continue to expand production at all of our existing factories, including
California, Nevada, here in Texas, Shanghai, so we intend to increase
production at all factories. So the Giga Mexico would be supplemental to the
output of all the other factories.”
Musk went on to tease a grand opening event at the factory.
Next-gen vehicles
As we mentioned above, Tesla displayed two veiled vehicles
during the presentation, hinting at how it will build its next-generation of
vehicles on a completely different platform design. A big part of that design
is building in a way that relies on automation to scale faster and cheaper.
“It’s going to look something like this where we build all
the sides of the cars independently, we only paint what we need to, and then we
assemble the parts of the car once, and only once. We put them where they need
to go,” Baglino said.
Baglino noted that this would mean more people and robots
having the space to work on separate pieces of the car, rather than lugging
heavy objects to a central buildout. What that looks like on the factory floor
is sub-assemblies, wherein the front, rear and floor with seats are assembled
separately, and then put together at final assembly.
“To increase the scale of adoption of electric vehicles to
the orders of magnitude that we just showed you, we have to make constraints
part of the solution,” he said. “It leads us to greater than 40 percent
reduction in footprint, which means we can build factories faster, with less
capex and more output per unit dollar.”
While that theoretically sounds neat, factories are
dangerous places and when more people work in closer quarters, injuries can
happen.
Neither Baglino, Musk nor head of design Franz von
Holzhausen gave additional details on next-generation vehicles. The only hint:
This next-gen design may also be used on the Cybertruck, according to Baglino.
Rare earths
As part of Tesla’s next-gen design, the company is
developing a new drive unit that it says will be more scalable, in large part
because it will eventually eliminate the use of rare earth materials.
“We have designed our next drive unit to use a permanent
magnet motor to not use any rare earth materials at all,” said Colin Campbell,
VP of powertrain engineering, noting that the new drive unit cost has been
reduced to $1,000. Those savings could, in theory, be passed onto the consumer
to make for a more accessible, affordable EV.
Tesla said its next powertrain will also use 75 percent less
silicone carbide without compromising performance or efficiency of the vehicle.
The new powertrain is also compatible with any battery chemistry, which will
give Tesla more flexibility in battery sourcing, said Campbell. Finally,
Tesla’s new powertrain factory is apparently 50 percent smaller than the
current one in Austin, which Campbell said means faster scaling of EV
production.
Heat pumps
The third part of Tesla’s Master Plan Part 3 is to switch
home, business and industrial heating to heat pumps. Most of that portion of
the presentation was just a Climate Tech 101 on the ill effects of traditional
heating systems and how heat pumps could help. Musk said at some point Tesla might
consider building heat pumps for the home to help solve this problem.
Tesla already produces heat pumps for its cars, so expanding
into homes wouldn’t be far out of left field. But if you have a gas or oil
heater, the good news is you don’t have to wait for Tesla to replace it. Plenty
of other companies already do this, including Sealed and BlocPower.
Charging and energy storage
Tesla broke up its info-dump with some announcements, and
several hints, on the future of its EV charging and energy storage businesses.
Most concretely, the automaker formally introduced Magic Dock, an upgrade to
Tesla’s charging stations which opens them up to vehicles that aren’t Teslas.
Rolling out the tech will enable Tesla to tap into billions in federal
subsidies.
Tesla also said it will add a $30 “unlimited overnight home
charging” plan to Tesla Electric in July. An invite-only electric plan, Tesla
Electric is exclusively available to Powerwall havers in parts of Texas where
retail choice exists. Tesla added that it aims to expand its electric plan into
other areas — “market by market, in the same way that we’ve approached Tesla
insurance.” The company offered no specific dates.
Later, the automaker said it would debut new energy storage
products in 2023. One chart shown to investors appeared to depict new megapack
and powerwall designs, also hidden beneath illustrated veils. Take this with a
grain or more of salt; Tesla has a track record of missing its own deadlines.
Robot
Tesla teased a little more information about its humanoid
robot, the Optimus, with a video showing two robots slowly building another bot
— a big step up from the prototype Tesla showed last October at AI Day.
As usual, Musk stated that Optimus will be worth
significantly more than the car side of things. Optimus is trained using the
same AI that trains Tesla’s Autopilot and FSD, and Musk detailed how even much
of the hardware for Optimus is taken from Tesla’s cars.
“The actuators in Optimus are all custom designed Tesla
actuators,” said Musk. “We designed the electric motor or the gearbox, the
power electronics, obviously the battery pack and everything else that goes
into Optimus. The same team that designed the groundbreaking electric motors
that are in the Model S Plaid designed the actuators in the robot.”
What this means, said Musk, is that Tesla has the tools to
bring an actual humanoid robot product to market at scale. Now it’s just a
question of timing. And also, apparently, of what the ratio of humans to
humanoid robots will be. Musk reckons it’ll be greater than one-to-one because
the robots can be used at homes, in industrial use cases and more.
How the robot fits into Tesla’s Master Plan Part 3, which is
focused on a sustainable energy future for Earth, isn’t exactly clear.
Source: https://tinyurl.com/2lqzercc
(www.lbcgroup.tv)
%20at%20Tesla%20Investor%20Day%20-%20Leba.png)
.png)
Comments
Post a Comment