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Audi e-tron GT (Audi) Sedan 2020 Neckarsulm, Baden-Württemberg, GermanyAudi Q4 e-tron (Audi) SUV 2021 Zwickau, Saxony, GermanyAudi Q6 e-tron (Audi) SUV 2023 Ingolstadt, Bavaria, GermanyAudi Q8 e-tron (Audi) SUV 2018 (as e-tron) Forest (Brussels), BelgiumBMW i4 (BMW) Sedan 2021 Munich, Bavaria, Germany BMW i5 (BMW) Sedan 2023 Dingolfing, Bavaria, Germany BMW i7 (BMW) Sedan 2022 Dingolfing, Bavaria, Germany BMW iX (BMW) SUV 2021 Dingolfing, Bavaria, Germany Mini Cooper SE (BMW/Mini) Hatchback 2020 Oxford, England, UK Cadillac Celestiq (GM) Sedan 2024 Warren, Michigan, USACadillac Escalade IQ (GM) SUV 2024 Detroit, Michigan, USACadillac Lyriq (GM) SUV 2022 Spring Hill, Tennessee, USAChevrolet Blazer EV (GM) SUV 2023 Ramos Arizpe, Coahuila, MexicoChevrolet Equinox EV (GM) SUV 2024 Ramos Arizpe, Coahuila, MexicoChevrolet Silverado EV (GM) Pickup 2023 Detroit (Hamtramck), Michigan, USAFaraday Future FF 91 (Faraday F.) Crossover 2023 Hanford, California, USA Ford F-150 Lightning (Ford) Pickup 2022 Dearborn, Michigan, USAFord Mustang Mach-E (Ford) SUV 2020 Cuautitlán Izcalli, State of Mexico, MexicoGenesis Electrified G80 (Hyundai) Sedan 2021 Ulsan, South KoreaGenesis Electrified GV70 (Hyundai) SUV 2022 Montgomery, Alabama, USAGenesis GV60 (Hyundai) SUV 2021 Ulsan, South KoreaGMC Hummer EV (Pickup) (GM) Pickup 2021 Detroit (Factory ZERO), Michigan, USAGMC Hummer EV (SUV) (GM) SUV 2023 Detroit (Factory ZERO), Michigan, USAGMC Sierra EV (GM) Pickup 2024 Detroit (Factory ZERO), Michigan, USAHonda Prologue (Honda) SUV 2024 Ramos Arizpe, Coahuila, MexicoAcura ZDX (Honda) SUV 2024 Spring Hill, Tennessee, USAHyundai Kona Electric (Hyundai) SUV 2018 Ulsan, South Korea Hyundai Ioniq 5 (Hyundai) Crossover 2021 Ulsan, South Korea Hyundai Ioniq 6 (Hyundai) Sedan 2022 Asan, South Korea Kia Niro EV (Hyundai/Kia) Crossover 2018 Hwaseong, South Korea Kia EV6 (Hyundai/Kia) Crossover 2021 Hwaseong, South Korea Kia EV9 (Hyundai/Kia) SUV 2023 Gwangmyeong, South Korea; West Point, Georgia, USALexus RZ 450e (Toyota/Lexus) SUV 2022 Toyota City (Motomachi), Aichi, JapanLucid Air (Lucid) Sedan 2021 Casa Grande, Arizona, USALucid Gravity (Lucid) SUV 2024 Casa Grande, Arizona, USAMaserati GranTurismo Folgore (Stellantis) Coupe 2023 Turin (Mirafiori), Piedmont, ItalyMercedes-Benz EQB (Daimler) SUV 2021 Kecskemét, Hungary Mercedes-Benz EQE (Daimler) Sedan 2022 Bremen, Germany Mercedes-Benz EQE SUV (Daimler) SUV 2023 Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA Mercedes-Benz EQS (Daimler) Sedan 2021 Sindelfingen, Baden-Württemberg, GermanyMercedes-Benz EQS SUV (Daimler) SUV 2022 Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA Mercedes-Benz EQG (Daimler) SUV 2024 (expected) Graz, Styria, AustriaNissan Leaf (Nissan) Hatchback 2010 Smyrna, Tennessee, USA Nissan Ariya (Nissan) SUV 2022 Tochigi, Japan Polestar 2 (Volvo/Geely) Liftback Sedan 2020 Luqiao, Zhejiang, ChinaPolestar 3 (Volvo/Geely) SUV 2023 Chengdu, China; Ridgeville, South Carolina, USAPolestar 4 (Volvo/Geely) SUV 2023 Ningbo (Hangzhou Bay), China; Busan, South KoreaPorsche Taycan (Volkswagen) Sedan (plus Cross Turismo) 2019 Stuttgart (Zuffenhausen), Baden-Württemberg, GermanyRivian R1T (Rivian) Pickup 2021 Normal, Illinois, USA Rivian R1S (Rivian) SUV 2022 Normal, Illinois, USA Rolls-Royce Spectre (BMW/Rolls-Royce) Coupe 2023 Goodwood, West Sussex, England, UKSubaru Solterra (Subaru/Toyota) SUV 2022 Toyota City (Motomachi), Aichi, Japan Tesla Model 3 (Tesla) Sedan 2017 Fremont, California, USA Tesla Model S (Tesla) Sedan 2012 Fremont, California, USA Tesla Model X (Tesla) SUV 2015 Fremont, California, USA Tesla Model Y (Tesla) SUV 2020 Fremont, California, USA; Austin, Texas, USA Tesla Cybertruck (Tesla) Pickup 2023 Austin, Texas, USA Toyota bZ4X (Toyota) SUV 2022 Toyota City (Motomachi), Aichi, Japan VinFast VF8 (VinFast) SUV 2022 Cát Hải (Hai Phong), Vietnam VinFast VF9 (VinFast) SUV 2023 Cát Hải (Hai Phong), Vietnam VinFast VF7 (VinFast) SUV 2024 Cát Hải (Hai Phong), Vietnam (U.S. production in NC from 2025)​ VinFast VF6 (VinFast) Crossover 2024 Cát Hải (Hai Phong), Vietnam Volvo C40 Recharge (Volvo) Crossover 2021 Ghent, East Flanders, Belgium Volvo EX30 (Volvo) Crossover 2023 Zhangjiakou, Hebei, China; Ghent, Belgium (from 2025)​ Volvo EX90 (Volvo) SUV 2024 Ridgeville (Charleston), South Carolina, USAVolvo XC40 Recharge (Volvo) SUV 2020 Ghent, East Flanders, Belgium Lotus Evija (Lotus) Coupe (2‑seat) 2023 Hethel, Norfolk, England, UKRimac Nevera (Bugatti Rimac) Coupe (2‑seat) 2021 Sveta Nedelja (Zagreb County), Croatia

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Tesla settles another wrongful death lawsuit that has big implications

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Tesla settles another wrongful death lawsuit that has big implications

Tesla has settled another wrongful death lawsuit, and it has significant implications based on Tesla’s legal strategy of not settling unless it is at fault.

Admitting a mistake is difficult. We humans are not good at it, which is why I respected Elon Musk when he said that Tesla wouldn’t seek victory in “just” legal cases against it and would “never settle an unjust case” against the company:

We will never seek victory in a just case against us, even if we will probably win. – We will never surrender/settle an unjust case against us, even if we will probably lose..

This strategy also means that if Tesla ever settles a case, it is admitting that it was in the wrong, even if settlements often come with no admission of wrongdoing.

Tesla has very rarely settled cases and Musk made this comment back in 2022. A lot has changed since then.

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In fact, around the same time Musk made that comment, he announced that he was building a team of “hardcore lawyers” at Tesla to pursue legal cases aggressively.

But it started to happen over the last few years.

In the UK, a Tesla owner challenged Tesla over its failure to deliver on its full self-driving claims and won a settlement that represented a refund of his purchase cost for FSD, with interest, after filing a claim in small claims court in 2023.

Last year, Tesla also finally settled a wrongful death lawsuit regarding the death of Model X owner Walter Huang, who was one of the first Tesla owners to die while using Autopilot back in 2018.

Now, Tesla has settled a second wrongful death lawsuit.

The estate of Clyde Leach, a Tesla Model Y owner, sued Tesla for wrongful death after his Model Y “suddenly accelerated, went off the road, and slammed into a pillar at an Ohio gas station.” Leach, 72, died from “blunt force trauma, burns, and other injuries” after the vehicle burned down following the impact.

Unlike Huang’s case, the lawsuit didn’t focus specifically on Tesla’s Autopilot or other ADAS features, but it claimed that a defect led to a “sudden acceleration” that contributed to the crash.

There have been numerous allegations of “sudden unintended acceleration” against Tesla vehicles, but in most cases, the evidence has pointed to the driver mistakenly pressing the wrong pedal.

This makes it particularly interesting that Tesla, which claims never to settle unjust claims against the company, has confirmed that it settled the case with Leach’s estate in a filing on Monday in federal court in San Francisco.

The terms of the settlement have not been released.

Electrek’s Take

In Tesla’s early days, there were numerous claims of “sudden unintended acceleration” regarding Tesla vehicles. I would often look into them, and we even had third parties review the telemetric logs; you could almost always prove pedal misplacement.

I assumed some of it also had to do with people not being used to vehicles that accelerate as quickly as Teslas, leading to less forgiving situations when pressing the wrong pedal.

However, considering Tesla settled this case and Musk’s claim that Tesla would not settle an “unjust” claim, there could be a case that sudden acceleration could occur with Tesla vehicles.

This could complicate a lot of other cases against Tesla.

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GM doubles down on Mexico, “no plans” to move EV production to US

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GM doubles down on Mexico,

Despite the will-they, won’t-they uncertainty surrounding the future of tariffs and union jobs and – let’s face it – just about everything else in every industry these days, GM says it has no plans to move production of its Ultium-based EVs from Mexico to the US.

GM has exclusively produced electric cars at its plant in Ramos Arizpe, Mexico since last year, and has created some 5,000 new jobs in the area according to economist Raquel Buenrostro, who currently serves as Mexico’s Secretary of Anti-Corruption and Good Government. And those cars – including the popular Chevy Equinox EV and Honda’s hot-selling Prologue – have been huge hits in their respective segments.

The General seems to know a good thing when it sees one, so it should come as no surprise to learn that GM has no plans to scuttle its assembly lines out of the country.

“At this time, GM has no plans to halt or relocate production of any of our EV models made in Mexico,” the director of GM de México’s EV operations, Adrián Enciso, told the Spanish-language newspaper, Milenio. “It’s possible that additional models, such as (the new 2026 Chevy Spark) could be built here, too.”

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Market Watch is reporting that the proposed tariffs, if they take effect, could raise GM’s cost to make electric cars in Mexico by up to $4,300 per vehicle. But while that could put a significant per-unit dent in GM’s profits, it’s worth noting that the EVs might continue to be built in Mexico and sold in Canada and other markets – the new Spark, especially, is targeted towards Central and South America, anyway.

And, frankly, GM can afford it.

SOURCE: Mexico News Daily.


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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.

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$350 million autonomous equipment sale is biggest in Epiroc history

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0 million autonomous equipment sale is biggest in Epiroc history

The mining equipment experts at Epiroc will supply a fleet of autonomous, zero-emission electric Pit Viper 271E and SmartROC D65 BE drill rigs at a number of Australian mines operated by multinational metals firm, Fortescue.

The $350 million AUD (approx. $225 million US) deal will see Epiroc AB supply its customer, Fortescue, with a number of blast hole drill rigs powered by either a cable connection to grid energy or, for more remote sites, batteries.

Fortescue will put the rigs to work at its iron ore mines in the Pilbara region in Western Australia. The driverless machines will eventually be operated fully autonomously, overseen by remote operators at Fortescue’s Integrated Operations Centre in Perth – more than 1,500 km away!

Epiroc says the machines will eliminate around 35 million liters of diesel consumption annually, according to Fortescue.

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“Fortescue is at the forefront of the mining industry in reducing emissions from operations, and in using automation to strengthen safety and productivity, and we are proud to support them on this important effort,” says Epiroc President Helena Hedblom. “Not only is this the largest contract we have ever received, but it is also a major step forward for our electric-powered surface equipment. We look forward to contributing to Fortescue’s continued success now and in the future.”

The Pit Viper 271 E rotary blast hole drill rig that offers the same levels of performance that the diesel Pit Viper line is acclaimed for. Its patented cable feed system that prolongs component longevity and reduces operational costs. The SmartROC D65 BE is a new, battery-electric version of the proven SmartROC D65 drill rig. They’re manufactured in Texas and Sweden, respectively.

Fortescue has been a pioneer in the electrification of the mining industry, whether it’s converting its massive Liebherr excavators to electric, funding the development of 6MW EV chargers, or deploying autonomous electric drill rigs like these in their mines – they’re well on their way to achieving their goal of carbon neutral operations by 2030.

Electrek’s Take

Pit Viper 271E cable electric drill rig; via Epiroc AB.

From drilling and rigging to heavy haul solutions, companies like Fortescue and Epiroc are proving that electric equipment is more than up to the task of moving dirt and pulling stuff out of the ground. At the same time, rising demand for nickel, lithium, and phosphates combined with the natural benefits of electrification are driving the adoption of electric mining machines while a persistent operator shortage is boosting demand for autonomous tech in those machines.

We covered the market outlook for autonomous and electric mining equipment earlier this summer, and I posted an episode exploring the growing demand for electric equipment on an episode of Quick Charge I’ve embedded, below. Check it out, then let us know what you think of the future of electric mining in the comments.

More EVs means more mines

SOURCE | IMAGES: Epiroc.

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