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Tesla has finished raising its main steel structure for its Tesla Semi factory, which appears to be on track for production in 2025.

The Tesla Semi program has seen some significant delays, but it feels like it’s finally happening.

It was first unveiled in 2017, and it was supposed to come to market in 2020, but it only officially entered production in late 2022.

Despite unveiling a production version and officially starting production, the program didn’t move much.

In October 2023, we learned that Tesla had only built about 70 Tesla Semi trucks and the company was using them internally and with one main customer: PepsiCo.

In January 2023, Tesla announced an expansion of Gigafactory Nevada to build the Tesla Semi in volume.

However, more than a year later, we hadn’t heard much about the effort.

Earlier this year, Tesla finally started to move some dirt and get some construction going at the site of the new factory. It sounded like plans changed and instead of expanding the existing Giga Nevada as originally planned, Tesla started building a new factory next to the existing one.

In April, Tesla said that the plan is for the factory to be finished next year and start producing Tesla Semi trucks by ‘late 2025’.

Now, right before the end of the year, Tesla released an update on the progress at the plant (via Dan Priestley, head of the Tesla Semi program, on X):

Yesterday, Semi Factory Nevada topped off the main area of the building with the last major piece of structural steel! Fantastic design and execution by this construction team and our contractor partners with focus on safety and efficiency. This factory is going to rock!

He shared a few pictures:

The structure came together rather quickly, but there’s still more work to be done until Tesla can achieve production.

Tesla aims to set up the factory throughout 2025 and bring the Tesla Semi to production on the new lines by the end of the year.

Lately, we have reported that Tesla is also slowly getting Tesla Semi into the hands of other customers.

Things are trending in the right direction.

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Tesla increases Model X price, brings back incentive Elon Musk said was ‘not coming back’

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Tesla increases Model X price, brings back incentive Elon Musk said was 'not coming back'

Tesla has increased Model X prices and brought back an incentive that CEO Elon Musk said was unsustainable and “not coming back to any vehicles.”

Today, Tesla updated its Model X configurator in the US to raise the prices of the electric SUV by $5,000.

The new prices are $84,990 for the Long Range version and $99,990 for the Plaid version:

The price increase means the Model X ino longer qualifies for the $7,500 Federal EV tax credit as it now exceeds the $80,000 price cap for electric SUVs.

But with the price increase, Tesla is ramping up the incentives.

Tesla brings the price down by $1,000 with a referral code, it gives one option for free if you buy the Full Self-Driving package, and it is bringing pack “free Supercharing for life.”

The latter, Tesla stopped offering because CEO Elon Musk said it was unsustainable.

Back in 2020, the CEO said that it will “not come back to any [Tesla] vehicles”:

“Just us being fools, but free Supercharging forever is not coming back to any vehicles. It’s not a good incentive structure.”

However, it did bring it back last year as an “end-of-the-year incentive.”

But now, Tesla is bringing it back for Model S and Model X, and it applies to orders from the US, Canada, Puerto Rico, Europe and Middle East.

Tesla has made some changes to the program. Instead of being linked to the vehicle, meaning free Supercharging would remain if you sell it, it is now attached to your Tesla account.

The automaker also says that it doesn’t apply to vehicles used for commercial purposes:

“Customers who purchase or lease a new Model X are eligible for free Supercharging during your ownership of the vehicle. Offer is tied to your Tesla Account and cannot be transferred to another vehicle, person or order, even in the case of ownership transfer. Used vehicles, business orders and vehicles used for commercial purposes (like taxi, rideshare and delivery services) are excluded from this promotion.”

However, Tesla also said that the last time, but it is hard to enforce.

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Porsche will launch new gas-powered cars, because profits come first (for now)

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Porsche will launch new gas-powered cars, because profits come first (for now)

Porsche will launch new gas-powered and plug-in hybrid (PHEV) cars as its EV models fail to gain traction. The sports car maker warned that the new combustion engine models and battery development expenses would hurt profits this year, sending share prices plunging.

Porsche plans new gas-powered cars to boost profits

After announcing that it expects profit margins to be between 10% and 12% this year, Porsche said it’s taking “extensive measures” to boost short and medium-term profits.

The forecast is well below Porsche’s long-term goal of an operating return on sales of more than 20%. To boost profits, the company announced plans to add new gas-powered (combustion engine) and plug-in hybrid vehicles to its lineup.

Porsche warned the new models and additional battery investments would take a hit on profits this year, costing an extra 800 million euros ($830,000).

The shift comes after Porsche’s deliveries fell 3% last year, with China, one of its most important markets, leading the downfall. Deliveries in China plunged 28% as it failed to keep up with domestic EV makers like BYD, Xiaomi, and XPeng.

Porsche-Taycan-EV
New 2025 Porsche Taycan GTS (Source: Porsche)

Last week, Porsche said it was in talks over ending contracts for CFO Lutz Meschke and Detlev von Platen, head of sales and marketing.

After introducing the upgraded 2025 model last year, Porsche delivered just over 20,800 Taycan models, nearly 50% fewer than in 2023.

Porsche-gas-powered-cars
Porsche Macan EV (Source: Porsche)

Porsche also began deliveries of its second electric vehicle, the Macan, at the end of September. This vehicle should help provide some relief this year. The company said the Macan EV launch “literally electrified us” after delivering over 18,000 models by the end of 2024.

Following the updated guidance, Porsche’s stock suffered one of its worst days since listing in 2022. Porsche, which was once valued higher than parent company Volkswagen, has watched its market cap dwindle in half from an all-time high in May 2023.

Electrek’s Take

Porsche wants to improve profits by adding new gas-powered cars, but this will likely only set it back further. The sports car maker is already struggling to keep up with BYD and others in China, which was its second-largest sales market in 2023, behind North America.

Taycan sales fell to just 4,747 in the US last year, 37% less than Porsche sold in 2023. Although the new model year rolling out is part of the reason, even Q4 sales were over 40% lower than the year before, at just 1,353 units.

With pure EV makers like Lucid and Rivian gaining momentum and others like Volvo, Genesis, and GM’s Cadillac launching new models, Porshe could lose out in the long term.

The situation is even more severe in China, where BYD, Xiaomi, and other domestic automakers are squeezing foreign brands out of the market.

Xiaomi, which began delivering its first self-developed EV, the SU7, last April, delivered over 135,000 models in 2024. This summer, it will launch its second EV model, the YU7.

Meanwhile, recent reports suggest Porsche could delay more electric models, including the Cayenne EV, due out in 2026.

Putting short-term profits ahead of long-term brand building could set Porsche up for failure. The company has already backtracked on its goal of having 80% of global deliveries electric by 2030, so what’s next?

Will Porsche turn things around? Or will it continue losing market share as the industry shifts to EVs? Drop us a comment below and let us know your thoughts.

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Elon Musk’s DOGE staffers don’t have access to U.S. nuclear secrets, Energy secretary says

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Elon Musk's DOGE staffers don't have access to U.S. nuclear secrets, Energy secretary says

DOGE staffers at Department of Energy don't have access to nuclear secrets, secretary says

DOGE staffers who are working at the Department of Energy do not have access to U.S. nuclear secrets, Secretary Chris Wright told CNBC in an interview Friday.

“I’ve heard these rumors. They’re like seeing our nuclear secrets. None of that is true at all,” Wright told CNBC’s Brian Sullivan in an exclusive interview. One of the core responsibilities of the department is maintaining and modernizing the U.S. nuclear stockpile.

The secretary said three staffers from the Elon Musk-led advisory team that the Trump administration calls the Department of Government Efficiency are working in the Energy Department’s offices.

“I know exactly who they are,” the secretary said. “They run through, checked by our security, and they have access to look around, talk to people and give us some good feedback on how things are going.”

Wright’s comments come after people familiar with the matter told CNN that a 23-year-old representative from DOGE was given access to the Energy Department’s IT system over objections from members of the general counsel and chief information offices.

U.S. Energy Sec. Chris Wright: We will not follow the German energy model

The people identified the staffer to CNN as a former SpaceX intern named Luke Farritor. He was granted access to basic IT systems such as email and Microsoft 365, one of the people told CNN.

CNBC has reached out to the Department of Energy for comment on the details of CNN’s report.

DOGE staffers’ access to government systems has raised privacy concerns. Wright told CNBC that the staffers “don’t have anybody’s proprietary information.” The secretary compared the staffers to “young gun management consultants coming in to take a critical look at how things are run.”

A DOGE staff member, Marko Elez, resigned Thursday after The Wall Street Journal connected the 25-year-old to a social media account that made racist posts. Elez had received approval from a federal judge earlier in the day to access the Treasury Department’s payment system, but the judge restricted his ability to share data from that system.

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