Getting a motorcycle license just got a little easier – and more electrifying. In a move that could help usher more riders into the electric future, new riders now have a chance to learn on LiveWire electric motorcycles as part of a licensing course.
It’s all starting at Bartels’ Harley-Davidson Riding Academy in Marina del Rey, where new riders preparing for the Motorcycle Safety Foundation (MSF) riding course can now opt for a LiveWire electric motorcycle instead of the standard internal combustion engine (ICE) motorcycle learner bikes.
The Riding Academy is now integrating the LiveWire S2 Mulholland and the S2 Alpinista into its official training fleet for its MSF-based rider course, making it one of the first in the country to use electric motorcycles for license training. Aspiring motorcyclists can now learn to ride on a smooth, quiet, clutch-free electric machine instead of the gasoline-powered bikes typically used in beginner courses.
Without the need to learn and master concepts such as clutch friction zones and shifting, riders can dedicate more focus to the riding principles that form the foundation of safe motorcycling.
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New riders learn those skills associated with safe motorcycle riding alongside instructors certified by the California Motorcyclist Safety Program (CMSP) and the Harley-Davidson Riding Academy. Graduates of the course earn their DL389 and Riding Academy Certificate of Completion. That leaves riders just one written exam passing score away from receiving their motorcycle endorsement.
Greg Andrews is the Riding Academy Site Manager at Bartels’ Harley-Davidson, and he explained that adding the LiveWire electric motorcycle into the rider course fundamentally shifted how students were able to learn.
“What the LiveWire does, as a basic trainer, is to allow the student to focus strictly on core riding skills,” said Andrews. He added that the XG500 and RA350 ICE motorcycles normally used in the course are good bikes in their own right, but they aren’t ideal for training new riders on important handling skills because of the added distraction in having to first learn and become proficient in operating a clutch and shifting while mastering throttle control.
“Students who have no idea of the science of leaning, corner traction percentages, gained and lost to lean angle, etc., are distracted by the ICE powertrain, versus the LiveWire students, whose sole focus is riding essentials,” said Andrews. “As a pilot, my father had me learn initially in gliders. There I learned pitch, roll, and yaw, coordinated turning, etc., and all the things necessary to fly larger aircraft. I’ve flown 60 different aircraft since. The LiveWire is essentially the glider.”
Members from Alpinestars’ graphics team were among the first to participate in the inaugural electric option for the rider training course.
“The repetition of stop-and-go made me appreciate eliminating clutch and shifting. It was also much easier to navigate tight turns and cone swerving,” said course graduate Tyler Emond, who completed the rider training on a LiveWire S2 electric motorcycle. “I think from a beginner standpoint, electric is 100% the way to start out.”
It was a sentiment shared by many, even those who already had experience with manual transmission vehicles. “I already know the basics of shifting because I’ve ridden dirt bikes and I drive a manual transmission car,” said fellow course graduate Dillon Kinkead. “And I think that being able to work on operating a motorcycle without having to focus on shifting is a benefit because I was able to concentrate on accelerating, braking, and turning.”
Bartels’ Harley-Davidson Rider Academy is now taking enrollment for more classes featuring the LiveWire S2 learner bikes, and interested riders can sign up online. LiveWire plans to expand electric rider training across the country, making riding more accessible and less intimidating for new generations.
Electrek’s Take
I have been calling for this for years and I’m super excited to finally see it become a possibility.
To be honest, I often saw it merely as cutting out an unnecessary step of learning something that would likely never be used (i.e., shifting gears on a motorcycle). Electric learner bikes didn’t used to be an issue because most electric motorcycle riders were converts from ICE bikes, having made the switch after seeing the light. But with more people than ever getting into electric motorcycles without ever having ridden a gasoline-powered motorcycle, it made sense to me that learning to work a clutch on a gas bike was wasted effort in such a case.
But I never really thought about how much more quickly it would allow someone to actually leapfrog the skills-based learning. And that makes perfect sense. Why spend several hours crawling across a parking lot while discussing the “friction zone” when you could already be learning about countersteering, lean angles, and evasive maneuvers?
And if I can speak from personal experience for a moment, this hits home for me as someone who actually went through a Harley-Davidson Rider Academy course to get my motorcycle license. In fact, I’ve gone through licensing courses in two countries, once on a Harley-Davidson Street 500 and once on a Kawasaki Ninja 400. I drove a 40-year-old manual transmission car every day in high school, and so learning to shift on a motorcycle came quickly, but few people come from that background anymore. I saw plenty of people struggle to learn to shift when they should have been learning to ride. And since plenty of folks like me see themselves in an electric motorcycle future, that extra time and frustration spent learning muscle memory only relevant to a gasoline-powered bike is wasted.
For those that do plan to go back to ICE, I can definitely see the value here too. You master the riding skills first, then you can spend all the time you need to learn to shift smoothly. But trying to learn to ride when you only learned how to get into first gear an hour ago is a recipe for frustration.
So, short story short, I’m all about this. With a whole generation of young riders now getting into motorcycles thanks to years of riding electric bikes, I imagine there will be many more takers for these types of all-electric training programs in the coming years.
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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:
This is bizarre. Senator Hawley is attempting to kill the largest transmission infrastructure project in U.S. history, which is already approved by all four states and is aligned with the President’s energy dominance agenda. Senator Hawley is trying to deprive Americans of… pic.twitter.com/ZLwTNUGZxA
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.
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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 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 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.
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.”
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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