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Headlining today’s Green Deals is Bluetti’s Pioneer MD Portable Power Station (AKA the AC180T) that has returned to its $499 low that we first saw during Amazon’s Prime Day event. Right behind it, we have the extended $500 discount on Heybike’s Hauler Cargo e-bikes that are at their lowest prices starting from $999, as well as the new Govee Outdoor Garden Lights 2-Pack at $150. From there, we have EcoFlow’s RIVER 3 power station returning to its Prime Day rate, as well as three offers on Greenworks and Worx tools – two of which are only lasting through the rest of the day. All these and more are waiting for you below. Plus, there’s all the hangover savings at the bottom of the page, like yesterday’s ongoing Aventon Sinch 2 e-bike low, the $114 savings on Autel’s 50A AC Lite level 2 EV charger, and more

Head below for other New Green Deals we’ve found today and, of course, Electrek’s best EV buying and leasing deals. Also, check out the new Electrek Tesla Shop for the best deals on Tesla accessories.

Bluetti has dropped its Pioneer MD power station with dual removable batteries back to its $499 low

Through its official Amazon storefront, Bluetti is bringing back the Prime Day low pricing on its Pioneer MD (AC180T) Portable Power Station at $499 shippedafter clipping the on-page $60 off coupon. While it goes for $1,299 in full directly from the brand’s website, where it’s currently marked down to $549, we see it keeping to a $1,099 full price at Amazon. Before Prime Day two weeks ago, the lowest we saw discounts go was $699, with the four-day event seeing the first fall to the $499 low. That same rate is returning for a second round here while the savings last, giving you a $600 markdown ($800 off the MSRP) at the best price we have tracked.

A unique model amongst Bluetti’s lineup, the Pioneer MD power station, also known as the AC180T, comes with two removable 716Wh batteries inside that can be swapped out for others, given you have more B70 batteries to insert into either of the two slots. This dual-battery setup provides a 1,432Wh LiFePO4 capacity that can deliver up to 1,800W of steady output, with that rate surging as high as 3,600W for larger appliance needs. There are nine port options to connect devices to: four AC outlets, two USB-Cs, two USB-As, and a DC port.

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Bluetti’s Pioneer MD power station comes with a turbo charging mode that you can activate through the onboard touchscreen or via the companion app, refilling the battery to 80% in just one hour. There’s also the option to plug into your car’s auxiliary port to charge while you drive or you can connect up to its max 500W solar input to recharge during sunny days in up to 2.5 hours.

Heybike Hauler cargo e-bike packed with cargo standing next to lake

You can score Heybike’s single or dual-battery Hauler cargo e-bikes with $500 savings at lows starting from $999

Heybike’s Prime Day Sale may be well-past over, but there are still some ongoing discounts on its lineup of e-bikes, with the Hauler Cargo single-battery e-bike still sitting at $999 shipped, and its dual-battery counterpart also staying put at $1,399 shipped. These two variations would usually go for $1,499 and $1,899 were they at full price, with discounts regularly keeping the costs down at $1,199 and $1,599 over the last year. This $999 low price first appeared during the brand’s Memorial Day Sale and repeated at the top of the month through Prime Day, though now we’re seeing it hold all this time after for a longer window at the best price we have tracked to date, giving you $500 in savings.

If you want to learn more about this e-bike, be sure to check out our original coverage of this ongoing deal here.

Govee outdoor garden lights brightening up flower beds with color

Govee’s new Matter-ready Outdoor Garden Lights 2-pack washes flower beds with vibrant color at $150

Through its official Amazon storefront, Govee is offering its new Outdoor Garden Lights 2-Pack for $149.99 shippedafter clipping the on-page $40 off coupon, beating out the direct pricing from the brand’s website by $10. This all-new outdoor model hit the market back in June carrying a $200 price tag when at full price, with the few discounts we’ve seen in the time since having dropped costs to $177, $160, and the $140 low back during Prime Day two weeks ago. If you missed out on that low, you can pick it up here at the second-best price we have tracked, saving you $50 while bringing ambient lighting moods to your garden/outdoor space.

If you want to learn more about this new outdoor lighting device, be sure to check out our original coverage here.

EcoFlow RIVER 3 power station sitting on table with various appliances and devices plugged into it

Prime Day pricing returns to EcoFlow’s compact RIVER 3 LiFePO4 power station at $189

By way of its official Amazon storefront, EcoFlow is offering returning Prime Day rates for its RIVER 3 Portable Power Station at $189 shipped. Normally going for $239 at full price, which is where the brand currently has it positioned on its direct website, we saw this same rate pop up for the Prime Day event two weeks ago. While we’ve seen it go lower in the past, you’re still looking at a solid 21% markdown that cuts $50 off the tag, giving you a compact means to keep your personal devices topped off.

If you want to learn more about this particular power station, be sure to check out our original coverage of this deal here.

woman clearing leaves in yard with Greenworks 60V 700 CFM cordless leaf blower

Clear away debris with up to 700 CFM force through this Greenworks 60V cordless leaf blower kit at $210

Amazon is now offering the Greenworks 60V 700 CFM Cordless Electric Leaf Blower with a 5.0Ah battery and rapid charger at $210.09 shipped. Normally, this package would run you $300 at full price, which is where the brand’s website currently has it listed at. The discounts we’ve seen on this newer model have mostly kept costs above $233, though we have seen falls further to $219, $210, and the $205 low before. You’re looking at the second-lowest of those rates, which gives you a powerful blower to clear your yard of debris with $90 in savings.

If you want to learn more about this leaf blower’s capabilities, be sure to check out our original coverage on this deal here.

man cleaning patio with Worx Nitro 20V Hydroshot portable electric pressure washer

Worx’s Nitro 20V Hydroshot electric pressure washer tackles light-duty jobs anywhere at a $140 low (Today only)

As part of its Deals of the Day, Best Buy is offering the Worx Nitro 20V Hydroshot Electric Pressure Washer at $139.99 shipped, with it also matching in price at Amazon. Normally going for $210 at full price, discounts over 2025 have seen quite a few returns to the $140 low, which is coming back around here for the rest of the day. You’ll be saving $70 while the deal lasts, giving you the best price we have tracked on one of the most portable electric pressure washing options on the market.

If you want to learn more about this portable outdoor cleaner, be sure to check out our original coverage of this one-day-only deal here.

Woman trimming tree with Greenworks 80V 26-inch cordless hedge trimmer

For today only, pick up Greenworks’ 80V 26-inch cordless hedge trimmer kit at $175

As part of its Deals of the Day, Best Buy is offering the Greenworks 80V 26-inch Cordless Electric Hedge Trimmer with 2.0Ah battery at $174.99 shipped, which is beating out the pricing we’re seeing from Amazon by $14, as well as the brand’s direct website, where it’s sitting at full price. This model usually carries a $240 to $250 price tag without any cuts, which we’ve seen keep above $190 since mid-April. While things have gone as low as $168 in the past, you’re looking at up to a solid $75 markdown at the third-lowest price we have tracked through the rest of the day, which even beats out its Prime Day pricing, when we saw it at $189.

If you want to learn more about this hedge trimmer, be sure to check out our coverage of this one-day-only deal here.

Best Summer EV deals!

Best new Green Deals landing this week

The savings this week are also continuing to a collection of other markdowns. To the same tune as the offers above, these all help you take a more energy-conscious approach to your routine. Winter means you can lock in even better off-season price cuts on electric tools for the lawn while saving on EVs and tons of other gear.

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91% of renewables are cheaper than fossil fuels, but Trump just defunded a vital US grid upgrade

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91% of renewables are cheaper than fossil fuels, but Trump just defunded a vital US grid upgrade

Renewables continued to dominate fossil fuels on price in 2024, according to a new report from the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA). The big takeaway: Clean energy is the cheapest power around – by a wide margin. So it’s pretty bad business that the biggest grid upgrade project in US history just got kneecapped by Trump’s Department of Energy to stop the “green scam.”

On average, solar power was 41% cheaper than the lowest-cost fossil fuel in 2024, and onshore wind was 53% cheaper. Onshore wind held its spot as the most affordable new source of electricity at $0.034 per kilowatt-hour, with solar close behind at $0.043/kWh.

IRENA’s report says global renewables added 582 gigawatts (GW) of capacity last year, which avoided about $57 billion in fossil fuel costs. That’s not a small dent. Even more impressive: 91% of all new renewable power projects built in 2024 were cheaper than any new fossil fuel option.

Technological innovation, strong supply chains, and economies of scale are driving the cost advantage. Battery prices are helping too: IRENA says utility-scale battery energy storage systems (BESS) are now 93% cheaper than they were in 2010, with prices averaging $192/kWh in 2024.

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But it’s not all smooth sailing. The report flags short-term cost pressures from trade tensions, material bottlenecks, and rising costs in some regions. North America and Europe feel more squeezed than others due to permitting delays, limited grid capacity, and higher system costs.

Meanwhile, countries in Asia, Africa, and South America could see faster cost drops thanks to stronger learning rates and abundant solar and wind resources.

One big challenge is financing. In developing countries, high interest rates and perceived investor risk inflate the levelized cost of electricity of renewables. For example, wind power generation costs were about the same in Europe and Africa last year ($0.052/kWh), but financing made up a much larger share of project costs in Africa. IRENA estimates the cost of capital was just 3.8% in Europe but 12% in Africa.

And even if projects are affordable to build, many are getting stuck in grid connection queues or stalled by slow permitting. Those “integration costs” are now a major hurdle, especially in fast-growing G20 and emerging markets.

Tech is helping with some of that – hybrid solar-wind-storage setups and AI-powered tools are improving grid performance and project efficiency. But digital infrastructure and grid modernization still lag in many places, holding renewables back.

“Renewables are rising, the fossil fuel age is crumbling,” said UN Secretary-General António Guterres. “But leaders must unblock barriers, build confidence, and unleash finance and investment.”

IRENA’s bottom line is that the economics of renewables are stronger than ever, but to keep the momentum going, governments and markets need to reduce risks, streamline permitting, and invest in grids.

Electrek’s Take

Speaking of unblocking barriers and investment, the opposite just happened today in Trump World. The Department of Energy just canceled a $4.9 billion conditional loan commitment for the 800-mile Grain Belt Express Phase 1 transmission project, the biggest transmission line in US history.

It’s a high-voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission line connecting Kansas wind farms across four states. It will connect four grids, improving reliability. It will be able to power 50 data centers and create 5,500 jobs. Phase 1 is due to start next year.

The new grid will also connect all forms of energy, not just renewables, and it’s super pathetic that Invenergy had to stoop to put up a map on the project’s home page today showing how it will transmit fossil fuels, the “existing dispatchable generation source,” and felt it had to leave renewables off the map entirely. Sorry, Kansas wind farms, you get no mention because this administration doesn’t like you.

Chicago-based Invenergy plans to build the 5 GW Grain Belt Express in phases from Kansas to Illinois. The company says the project will save customers $52 billion in energy costs over 15 years. Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) complained to Trump about the project, calling it a “green scam,” and got the government loan canceled based on a lie, claiming it would cost taxpayers “billions.” This was Invenergy’s response on X:

As usual, Trump was swayed by the last person in the room, and Hawley shot an entire region in the foot when an upgraded grid and more renewables are needed more than ever. Hopefully, this project can continue despite the ignorant shortsightedness coming from the Republicans (who ironically released an AI Action Plan today).

It beggars belief that this political party is this isolated from the rest of the world – well, besides our besties Iran, Libya, and Yemen, who aren’t part of the Paris Agreement either – and being that the US is the world’s No 2 polluter, the world will suffer for its arrogance.

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


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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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Elon Musk with a straight face: Tesla Robotaxi will cover half of US population by end of the year

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Elon Musk with a straight face: Tesla Robotaxi will cover half of US population by end of the year

Elon Musk claims that Tesla Robotaxi will cover half of the US population by the end of the year and we can’t stop laughing.

Today, Tesla released its Q2 2025 financial results.

Earnings are down 23% on falling electric vehicle sales and lower margins, but Tesla’s stock is not crashing because CEO Elon Musk is promising a return to earnings growth through autonomous driving and humanoid robots.

We previously reported on how Tesla’s Robotaxi effort is a major shift in strategy for Tesla, which has been promising unsupervised self-driving in its customer vehicles for years.

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Instead, the Robotaxi service consists of an internal fleet operating within a geo-fenced area, currently only in Austin, Texas, and powered by teleoperation and in-car supervisors with a finger on a kill switch at all times.

“I believe half of the population of the US will be covered by Tesla’s Robotaxi by the end of the year.”

He added that he believes that regulatory approval will be the biggest hurdle, even though Tesla’s current service requires a Tesla employee in each car, which is a major hurdle to scaling.

Musk and Ashok Elluswamy, Tesla’s head of self-driving, both claimed that the Bay Area will be the first market where Tesla plans to expand its Robotaxi service. However, Elluswamy added that the program will initially have a driver in the driver’s seat.

This makes sense considering we learned last week that Tesla has yet to apply for the proper permits to operate an autonomous ride-hailing service in California.

Electrek’s Take

This is laughable. Who believes that? How can Elon say that with a straight face when Tesla only has a joke of a system that requires supervision at all times?

For context, Tesla currently only operates in a little over half of Austin, Texas. Here’s the list of all the metro areas Tesla would need to launch Robotaxi by the end of the year to cover half of the US population:

Rank Metro Area Population Cumulative Total
1 New York 19.15 M 19.15 M
2 Los Angeles 12.68 M 31.83 M
3 Chicago 9.04 M 40.87 M
4 Houston 6.89 M 47.76 M
5 Dallas–Fort Worth 6.73 M 54.49 M
6 Miami 6.37 M 60.86 M
7 Atlanta 6.27 M 67.13 M
8 Philadelphia 5.86 M 72.99 M
9 Washington, DC 5.60 M 78.59 M
10 Phoenix 4.83 M 83.42 M
11 Boston 4.40 M 87.82 M
12 Seattle 3.58 M 91.40 M
13 Detroit 3.54 M 94.94 M
14 San Diego 3.37 M 98.31 M
15 San Francisco 3.36 M 101.67 M
16 Tampa 3.04 M 104.71 M
17 Minneapolis–St. Paul 2.62 M 107.33 M
18 St. Louis 2.80 M 110.13 M
19 Denver 2.99 M 113.12 M
20 Baltimore 2.83 M 115.95 M
21 Orlando 2.76 M 118.71 M
22 Charlotte 2.75 M 121.46 M
23 San Antonio 2.60 M 124.06 M
24 Austin 2.42 M 126.48 M
25 Pittsburgh 2.43 M 128.91 M
26 Sacramento 2.42 M 131.33 M
27 Las Vegas 2.32 M 133.65 M
28 Cincinnati 2.26 M 135.91 M
29 Kansas City 2.19 M 138.10 M
30 Columbus 2.14 M 140.24 M
31 Cleveland 2.16 M 142.40 M
32 Indianapolis 2.12 M 144.52 M
33 San José 1.99 M 146.51 M
34 Virginia Beach–Norfolk 1.76 M 148.27 M
35 Providence 1.68 M 149.95 M
36 Milwaukee 1.57 M 151.52 M
37 Jacksonville 1.60 M 153.12 M
38 Raleigh–Durham 1.45 M 154.57 M
39 Nashville 1.43 M 156.00 M
40 Oklahoma City 1.42 M 157.42 M
41 Richmond 1.30 M 158.72 M
42 Louisville 1.28 M 160.00 M
43 Salt Lake City 1.26 M 161.26 M
44 New Orleans 1.23 M 162.49 M
45 Hartford 1.20 M 163.69 M
46 Buffalo 1.11 M 164.80 M
47 Birmingham 1.10 M 165.90 M

This is ridiculous. The lies are becoming increasingly larger and more brazen. We know what that means.

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Tesla claims it produced the first builds of its ‘new affordable’ electric car models

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Tesla claims it produced the first builds of its 'new affordable' electric car models

Tesla claims to have produced the “first builds” of its new “more affordable” electric car models, which are expected to be stripped-down versions of the Model 3 and Model Y.

Since last year, Tesla has discussed launching “more affordable models” based on its existing Model 3/Y vehicle platform in the first half of 2025.

The first half of 2025 came and went, and Tesla didn’t launch any new “more affordable” models.

With the release of its Q2 2025 financial results today, Tesla is trying to get semantic and says that it has produced the “first builds” of “a more affordable model” in June:

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We continue to expand our vehicle offering, including first builds of a more affordable model in June, with volume production planned for the second half of 2025.

Now, the automaker talks about launching the vehicle “in 2025” and again claims to have stuck to its “1H2025” timeline with the “initial production”:

“Plans for new vehicles that will launch in 2025 remain on track, including initial production of a more affordable model in 1H25.”

There’s confusion in the Tesla community around Tesla’s upcoming “affordable” vehicles because CEO Elon Musk falsely denied a report last year about Tesla’s “$25,000” EV model being canceled.

The facts are that Musk canceled two cheaper vehicles that Tesla was working on, commonly referred as “the $25,000 Tesla” in early 2024. Those vehicles were codenamed NV91 and NV92, and they were based on the new vehicle platform that Tesla is now reserving for the Cybercab.

Instead, Musk noticed that Tesla’s Model 3 and Model Y production lines were starting to be underutilized as the Company faced demand issues. Therefore, Tesla canceled the vehicles program based on the new platform and decided to build new vehicles on Model 3/Y platform using the same production lines.

We previously reported that these electric vehicles will likely look very similar to Model 3 and Model Y.

In recent months, several other media reports reinforced this, and Tesla all but confirmed it during its latest earnings call, when it stated that it is “limited in how different vehicles can be when built on the same production lines.”

In recent weeks, a slightly camouflaged prototype resembling almost exactly the Model Y has been spotted around Tesla’s factory in California.

The vehicle is expected to be the “stripped-down” Model Y, which will feature lesser material, fewer features, and possibly be slightly smaller.

It is rumored to start at around $35,000.

The Model Y currently starts at $45,000 in the US before any incentive.

Electrek’s Take

I previously speculated that Tesla might wait to launch the stripped-down, cheaper models in the US until after Q3 to take full advantage of the demand that will be pulled forward due to the end of the $7,500 federal tax credit starting in Q4.

Things are currently aiming in that direction.

Ultimately, I think it will help Tesla increase volumes slightly, but there will be significant cannibalization of its existing lineup. I predict that it will not compensate for the decrease in sales.

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