Connect with us

Published

on

Black Friday 2023 is fast approaching, and portable power trailblazer BLUETTI is launching astonishing discounts of up to $2,400 from November 17.

From portable power solutions to expandable battery packs, BLUETTI’s Black Friday deals are the most exciting yet in 2023. BLUETTI is also unveiling its all-new AC200L power generator at an unbeatable early-bird price. Keep reading to discover what amazing deals can be had until November 27!

Backup and off-grid living

AC300+B300

The Black Friday deal price is $2,799 with a free 120V home integration kit (reg. $619) 

The AC300 system switches over in 20 milliseconds, ensuring you’re never left in the dark. It offers a scalable capacity that ranges from 3,072Wh to a colossal 12,288Wh when paired with two to four B300 packs. With 3,000W of max power and 16 versatile outlets, you can charge all your essential home appliances including refrigerators, heaters, air conditioners, and more. Plug it into solar panels for 2,400W charging, and you’ll have a stable stream of clean power to keep things humming during extended power outages.

AC500+B300S

The Black Friday deal price is $4,799 with a free PV380W solar panel (reg. $799)

The 5,000W AC500 system can run just about anything in your house, whether it’s a home theater system or a coffee maker. Even in frigid temperatures as low as as -4F (-20C), it’s up to the challenge thanks to its built-in self-heating feature. The basic 3,072Wh AC500+B300S set can power an 800W refrigerator for three hours or an electric blanket for 21 hours.

Featuring an expandable capacity capped at 18,432Wh, a responsive UPS, six ways to recharge, and up to 3,000W of solar charging capability, this system is the ideal off-grid power source for your home or remote cabin.

Power indoors and out

New arrival – AC200L

At the launch price of $1,499, Electrek readers will get an extra $100 off using the code Electrek

This sleek newcomer delivers 2,400W of power that increases to 3,600W in Powerlifting mode. The 2,048Wh battery can be recharged in just two hours using the 1,200W solar charger. If you plug the AC200L into the wall using the 2,400W Turbo Charge mode, it charges in just 90 minutes without requiring a bulky adapter. Using Bluetooth or wifi, you can monitor the AC200L in real-time, enable ECO mode to conserve battery life, and much more with the BLUETTI App.

By adding UPS functionality and an extended five-year warranty, BLUETTI gives you peace of mind during power outages and beyond. The AC200L power station will be available through November 30 for an early-bird price of just $1,499.

Pair the AC200L with a 3,072Wh B300 expansion battery for a total capacity of 5,120Wh, and you’ll get more power for less money at only $2,999.

AC200 Max

Was $1,599, Now $1,299 save $300

BLUETTI’s flagship AC200MAX boasts a 2,048Wh capacity and 2,200W of output, which is perfect for RV adventures, van life, glamping, and being off the grid. Its front panel features 16 versatile outlets that can power all your essentials, including coffee makers, electric grills, and small fridges. Did we mention it can run a 40W CPAP machine for over 80 hours? With its efficient 900W solar intake, you’re never left wanting for power as long as the sun shines. Expand its capacity with a B230 or B300 expansion battery, and you can push it to a maximum of 8,192Wh.

AC180

AC180 Was $999, Now $649, save $350

AC180P+PV200 Was $1,548, Now $1,298, save $250

Weighing about 37 pounds, the AC180 and its offline counterpart, the AC180P, are compact generators for off-grid living. Both can dish out 1,800W of power, or 2,700W in power lifting mode, to run resistive devices such as dryers and electric kettles. Their responsive UPS features also make them reliable backup power in sudden power failures.

These power stations offer a greener, quieter, and much safer alternative to gas generators. They differ slightly in capacity, 1,152Wh for the AC180 and 1,440Wh for the AC180P. As for controlling them remotely, the AC180 can be operated with the BLUETTI App via Bluetooth, and the AC180P can also be connected via wifi.

Pack light, explore further

AC70

Was $599 Now $499 save $100

Weighing just 22.5 pounds (10.2 kg), the AC70 is designed for adventurers. Based on the success of the EB70S, it’s upgraded to offer an impressive 1,000W of continuous output for a wide range of appliances, from refrigerators to blenders. In Powerlifting mode, it can deliver a potent 2,000W of power for hairdryers and small power tools.

Its 768Wh LFP battery boasts over 3,000W of life cycles. On a single charge, you can power up a 15Wh camera 45 times, a 40W CPAP machine for 12 hours, and a 120W car fridge for 4.7 hours. The AC70 features fast-charging options, including 850W AC input (0-80% in just 45 minutes) and 500W solar input for a full charge in two hours, making it a versatile and convenient power source for short road trips or emergency backup.

AC2A+PV120

Was $548 Now $399 save $149

For those who need portability, the AC2A is the perfect choice. At only 7.9 pounds (3.6kg), it’s compact and easy to carry around. Despite its toolbox-like size, it delivers 300W of AC power and a 600W surge from its 204Wh battery. Six ports, including a 100W USB-C port for fast laptop charging, let you power your gadgets all at once.

It also boasts a 270W fast wall charge that goes from empty to fully charged in just 1.4 hours. Built with durable LFP battery cells, it guarantees over 3,000 life cycles before degrading to 80% of its original capacity. Ideal for camping and hiking, the AC2A is also solar-ready with a 200W solar input.

Power more and longer

B230 expansion battery 

Was $1,099 Now $999 save $100

The 2,048Wh B230 expansion battery adds even more juice to your BLUETTI power stations. Equipped with its own power button, a USB port, a USB-C (100W) port, and a 12V/10A output, you can use it on its own to power laptops, car fridges, and other devices. It charges up using the T500 Adapter or solar panels, with a maximum input of 500 watts.

B300 expansion battery

Was $1,999 Now $1,699 save $300

The AC300’s companion battery, the B300, offers an impressive 3,072Wh of capacity. It supports a maximum of 700W of dual charging, whether through a combination of 500W AC, and 200W solar or dual solar inputs. Like the B230, it’s built with durable LiFePO4 cells with over 3,500 life cycles before degrading to 80% and serves as a substantial power bank alone.

BLUETTI Black Friday bonuses

Besides these incredible discounts, BLUETTI’s Black Friday sale includes exciting perks like special BLUETTI Lifestyle gifts for purchases over specific thresholds, earning five times BLUETTI Bucks for orders placed between November 17 and November 27, lucky wheels, and an additional 5% reduction for referring friends.

Don’t miss out on these once-a-year deals! Mark your calendar for Friday, November 17 and save big on Black Friday power station deals.

About BLUETTI

BLUETTI has been committed to promoting sustainability and providing green energy solutions since its inception. By offering eco-friendly energy storage solutions for both indoor and outdoor use, BLUETTI aims to provide exceptional experiences for our homes while also contributing to a sustainable future for our planet. This commitment to sustainable energy has helped BLUETTI expand its reach to over 100 countries and gain the trust of millions of customers worldwide.

Follow BLUETTI on Twitter here and on Facebook here.

Photos: BLUETTI

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Continue Reading

Environment

America – it’s a party now! Plus: an electric Honda Ruckus and updated BMW

Published

on

By

America – it's a party now! Plus: an electric Honda Ruckus and updated BMW

Elon Musk isn’t happy about Trump passing the Big Beautiful Bill and killing off the $7,500 EV tax credit – but there’s a lot more bad news for Tesla baked into the BBB. We’ve got all that and more on today’s budget-busting episode of Quick Charge!

We also present ongoing coverage of the 2025 Electrek Formula Sun Grand Prix and dive into some two wheeled reports on the new electric Honda Ruckus e:Zoomer, the latest BMW electric two-wheeler, and more!

Prefer listening to your podcasts? Audio-only versions of Quick Charge are now available on Apple PodcastsSpotifyTuneIn, and our RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players.

New episodes of Quick Charge are recorded, usually, Monday through Thursday (and sometimes Sunday). We’ll be posting bonus audio content from time to time as well, so be sure to follow and subscribe so you don’t miss a minute of Electrek’s high-voltage daily news.

Advertisement – scroll for more content

Got news? Let us know!
Drop us a line at tips@electrek.co. You can also rate us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, or recommend us in Overcast to help more people discover the show.


If you’re considering going solar, it’s always a good idea to get quotes from a few installers. To make sure you find a trusted, reliable solar installer near you that offers competitive pricing, check out EnergySage, a free service that makes it easy for you to go solar. It has hundreds of pre-vetted solar installers competing for your business, ensuring you get high-quality solutions and save 20-30% compared to going it alone. Plus, it’s free to use, and you won’t get sales calls until you select an installer and share your phone number with them. 

Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisors to help you every step of the way. Get started here.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Continue Reading

Environment

FERC: Solar + wind made up 96% of new US power generating capacity in first third of 2025

Published

on

By

FERC: Solar + wind made up 96% of new US power generating capacity in first third of 2025

Solar and wind accounted for almost 96% of new US electrical generating capacity added in the first third of 2025. In April, solar provided 87% of new capacity, making it the 20th consecutive month solar has taken the lead, according to data belatedly posted on July 1 by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and reviewed by the SUN DAY Campaign.

Solar’s new generating capacity in April 2025 and YTD

In its latest monthly “Energy Infrastructure Update” report (with data through April 30, 2025), FERC says 50 “units” of solar totaling 2,284 megawatts (MW) were placed into service in April, accounting for 86.7% of all new generating capacity added during the month.

In addition, the 9,451 MW of solar added during the first four months of 2025 was 77.7% of the new generation placed into service.

Solar has now been the largest source of new generating capacity added each month for 20 consecutive months, from September 2023 to April 2025.

Advertisement – scroll for more content

Solar + wind were >95% of new capacity in 1st third of 2025

Between January and April 2025, new wind provided 2,183 MW of capacity additions, accounting for 18.0% of new additions in the first third.

In the same period, the combination of solar and wind was 95.7% of new capacity while natural gas (511 MW) provided just 4.2%; the remaining 0.1% came from oil (11 MW).

Solar + wind are >22% of US utility-scale generating capacity

The installed capacities of solar (11.0%) and wind (11.8%) are now each more than a tenth of the US total. Together, they make up almost one-fourth (22.8%) of the US’s total available installed utility-scale generating capacity.

Moreover, at least 25-30% of US solar capacity is in small-scale (e.g., rooftop) systems that are not reflected in FERC’s data. Including that additional solar capacity would bring the share provided by solar + wind to more than a quarter of the US total.

With the inclusion of hydropower (7.7%), biomass (1.1%), and geothermal (0.3%), renewables currently claim a 31.8% share of total US utility-scale generating capacity. If small-scale solar capacity is included, renewables are now about one-third of total US generating capacity.

Solar is on track to become No. 2 source of US generating capacity

FERC reports that net “high probability” additions of solar between May 2025 and April 2028 total 90,158 MW – an amount almost four times the forecast net “high probability” additions for wind (22,793 MW), the second-fastest growing resource. Notably, both three-year projections are higher than those provided just a month earlier.

FERC also foresees net growth for hydropower (596 MW) and geothermal (92 MW) but a decrease of 123 MW in biomass capacity.

Taken together, the net new “high probability” capacity additions by all renewable energy sources over the next three years – i.e., the bulk of the Trump administration’s remaining time in office – would total 113,516 MW.  

FERC doesn’t include any nuclear capacity in its three-year forecast, while coal and oil are projected to contract by 24,373 MW and 1,915 MW, respectively. Natural gas capacity would expand by 5,730 MW.

Thus, adjusting for the different capacity factors of gas (59.7%), wind (34.3%), and utility-scale solar (23.4%), electricity generated by the projected new solar capacity to be added in the coming three years should be at least six times greater than that produced by the new natural gas capacity, while the electrical output by new wind capacity would be more than double that by gas.

If FERC’s current “high probability” additions materialize, by May 1, 2028, solar will account for one-sixth (16.6%) of US installed utility-scale generating capacity. Wind would provide an additional one-eighth (12.6%) of the total. That would make each greater than coal (12.2%) and substantially more than nuclear power or hydropower (7.3% and 7.2%, respectively).

In fact, assuming current growth rates continue, the installed capacity of utility-scale solar is likely to surpass that of either coal or wind within two years, placing solar in second place for installed generating capacity, behind only natural gas.

Renewables + small-scale solar may overtake natural gas within 3 years

The mix of all utility-scale (ie, >1 MW) renewables is now adding about two percentage points each year to its share of generating capacity. At that pace, by May 1, 2028, renewables would account for 37.7% of total available installed utility-scale generating capacity – rapidly approaching that of natural gas (40.1%). Solar and wind would constitute more than three-quarters of installed renewable energy capacity. If those trend lines continue, utility-scale renewable energy capacity should surpass that of natural gas in 2029 or sooner.

However, as noted, FERC’s data do not account for the capacity of small-scale solar systems. If that’s factored in, within three years, total US solar capacity could exceed 300 GW. In turn, the mix of all renewables would then be about 40% of total installed capacity while the share of natural gas would drop to about 38%.

Moreover, FERC reports that there may actually be as much as 224,426 MW of net new solar additions in the current three-year pipeline in addition to 69,530 MW of new wind, 9,072 MW of new hydropower, 202 MW of new geothermal, and 39 MW of new biomass. By contrast, net new natural gas capacity potentially in the three-year pipeline totals just 26,818 MW. Consequently, renewables’ share could be even greater by mid-spring 2028.

“The Trump Administration’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ … poses a clear threat to solar and wind in the years to come,” noted the SUN DAY Campaign’s executive director, Ken Bossong. “Nonetheless, FERC’s latest data and forecasts suggest cleaner and lower-cost renewable energy sources may still dominate and surpass nuclear power, coal, and natural gas.” 


To limit power outages and make your home more resilient, consider going solar with a battery storage system. In order to find a trusted, reliable solar installer near you that offers competitive pricing, check out EnergySage, a free service that makes it easy for you to go solar. They have hundreds of pre-vetted solar installers competing for your business, ensuring you get high-quality solutions and save 20-30% compared to going it alone. Plus, it’s free to use and you won’t get sales calls until you select an installer and you share your phone number with them.

Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisers to help you every step of the way. Get started here. –trusted affiliate link*

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Continue Reading

Environment

Tesla was forced to reimburse Full Self-Driving in arbitration after failing to deliver

Published

on

By

Tesla was forced to reimburse Full Self-Driving in arbitration after failing to deliver

Tesla has been forced to reimburse a customer’s Full Self-Driving package after an arbitrator determined that the automaker failed to deliver it.

Tesla has been promising its car owners that every vehicle it has built since 2016 has all the hardware capable of unsupervised self-driving.

The automaker has been selling a “Full Self-Driving” (FSD) package that is supposed to deliver this unsupervised self-driving capability through over-the-air software updates.

Almost a decade later, Tesla has yet to deliver on its promise, and its claim that the cars’ hardware is capable of self-driving has been proven wrong. Tesla had to update all cars with HW2 and 2.5 computers to HW3 computers.

Advertisement – scroll for more content

In January 2025, CEO Elon Musk finally admitted that HW3 also won’t be able to support self-driving and said that Tesla will have to upgrade the computers. 6 months later, Tesla has yet to communicate a plan for retrofits to owners.

Tesla is now attempting to deliver its promise of unsupervised self-driving on HW4 cars, which have been in production since 2023-2024, depending on the model. However, there are still significant doubts about this being possible, as the best available data indicate that Tesla only achieves about 500 miles between critical disengagements with the latest software on the hardware.

The situation is creating a significant liability for Tesla, which already needs to replace computers in millions of vehicles, and it may need to do so in millions more.

On the other hand, many customers are losing faith in Tesla’s ability to deliver on its promise and manage this computer retrofit situation. Some of them have been seeking to be reimbursed for their purchase of the Full Self-Driving package, which Tesla sold from $8,000 to $15,000.

A Tesla owner in Washington managed to get the automaker to reimburse the FSD package, but it wasn’t easy.

The 2021 Model Y was Marc Dobin and his wife’s third Tesla. Due to his wife’s declining mobility, Dobin was intrigued about the FSD package as a potential way to give her more independence. He wrote in a blog post:

But FSD was more than hype for us. The promise of a car that could drive my wife around gave us hope that she’d maintain independence as her motor skills declined. We paid an extra $10,000 for FSD.

Tesla’s FSD quickly disillusioned Dobin. First, he couldn’t even enable it due to Tesla restricting the Beta access through a “safety score” system, something he pointed out was never mentioned in the contract.

Furthermore, the feature required the supervision of a driver at all times, which was not what Tesla sold to customers.

Tesla doesn’t make it easy for customers in the US to seek a refund or to sue Tesla as it forces buyers to go through arbitration through its sales contract.

That didn’t deter Dobin, who happens to be a lawyer with years of experience in arbitration. It took almost a year, but Tesla and Dobin eventually found themselves in arbitration, and it didn’t go well for the automaker:

Almost a year after filing, the evidentiary hearing was held via Zoom. Tesla produced one witness: a Field Technical Specialist who admitted he hadn’t checked what equipment shipped with our car, hadn’t reviewed our driving logs, and didn’t know details about the FSD system installed on our car, if any. He hadn’t spoken to any sales rep we dealt with or reviewed the contract’s integration clause.

There were both a Tesla lawyer and an outside counsel representing Tesla at the hearing, but the witness was not equipped to answer questions.

Dobin wrote:

He was a service technician, not a lawyer or salesperson. But that’s who Tesla brought to the hearing. At the end, I genuinely felt bad for him because Tesla set him up to be a human punching bag—someone unprepared to answer key questions, forced to defend a system he clearly didn’t understand. While I was examining him, a Tesla in-house lawyer sat silently, while the company’s outside counsel tried to soften the blows of the witness’ testimony.

He focused on Tesla’s lack of disclosure regarding the safety score and the fact that the system does not meet the promises made to customers.

The arbitrator sided with Dobin and wrote:

The evidence is persuasive that the feature was not functional, operational, or otherwise available.”

Tesla was forced to reimburse the FSD package $10,000 plus taxes, and pay for the almost $8,000 in arbitration fees.

Since Tesla forces arbitration through its contracts, it is required to cover the cost.

Electrek’s Take

This is interesting. Tesla assigned two lawyers to this case in an attempt to avoid reimbursing $10,000, knowing it would have to cover the expensive arbitration fees – most likely losing tens of thousands of dollars in the process.

It makes no sense to me. Tesla should have a standing offer to reimburse FSD for anyone who requests it until it can actually deliver on its promise of unsupervised self-driving.

That’s the right thing to do, and the fact that Tesla would waste money trying to fight customers requesting a refund is really telling.

Tesla is simply not ready to do the right thing here, and it doesn’t bode well for the computer retrofits and all the other liabilities around Tesla FSD.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Continue Reading

Trending