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Tesla drivers in Sweden are stuck in wait lines at Superchargers stations. Tesla blames union strikes preventing them from connecting their new stations to the grid.

For more than a year now, Tesla service workers in Sweden have been on strike, demanding inclusion in a collective agreement.

Tesla has historically opposed unions and successfully resisted unionization at its manufacturing facilities. Initially, this strike in Sweden seemed manageable, involving only a few dozen workers. However, Tesla underestimated the strength of solidarity among Swedish workers.

While the automaker managed to get around the service workers strike, it is now feeling the impact of “sympathy strikes” from other unions in Sweden.

Several other unions in the country, including port workers, electricians, and cleaning services that work with Tesla, have refused to cooperate with the company in support of the strike.

Now, one of those sympathy strikes is really starting to cause trouble to Tesla owners, and other EV owners.

Union IF Metall used its influence to prevent Tesla from powering new Supercharger stations to put pressure to bring them to the negotiation table, and during the holidays, it is resulting in extremely long lines at the working Supercharger stations, as some posted on X (Nicklas Nilsso):

We have seen long wait lines at Tesla Superchargers before, but I think this might be the longest I’ve ever seen.

The same Tesla owner posted a local Supercharger map that showed that the vast majority of stations in the country currently required wait times to access a charger:

Max de Zegher, Tesla’s head of charging, commented on the situation and blamed the union strikes for preventing over 100 new Superchargers from being energized:

One of those “sympathy strikes” is getting pretty impactful As forecasted, Swedish EV drivers are suffering and EV infrastructure is not keeping up unless Superchargers get energized by the utilities blocking them from getting energized. Tesla Superchargers are critical infrastructure, especially for peak travel days like this. 100+ stalls in Sweden would have been energized this winter, if it wasn’t for sympathy strikes.

He added that there’s “no clear path” to fixing the situation:

Despite no clear path yet to getting turned on, we will also continue to invest and build sites for Swedish EV drivers, including more capacity in Malung, Käppen, Vansbro, Idre, Särna, and Sunne. We appreciate the support from the public to help us get Superchargers energized asap. Waiting in line like this is super painful, hurts EV adoption and totally fixable!

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has taken a hard line against unions and shown unwillingness to negotiate with them.

The automaker is also facing growing union pushbacks in Germany.

Electrek’s Take

That’s a bummer. As de Zegher says, wait lines at chargers are not a great look for EVs. The good news is that most people know the reason for this problem in this specific case is this union dispute rather than an actual problem with EVs.

Now, of course, Tesla blames it on the unions, and the unions blame it on Tesla for not engaging with them.

Can’t we just all be friends?

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Tesla (TSLA) releases Q2 2025 financing results: earnings down 23%

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Tesla (TSLA) releases Q2 2025 financing results: earnings down 23%

Tesla (TSLA) released its financial results and shareholders’ letter for the second quarter (Q2) 2025 after market close today.

We are updating this post with all the details from the financial results, shareholders’ letter, and the conference call later tonight. Refresh for the latest information.

Tesla Q2 2025 earnings expectations

As we reported in our Tesla Q2 2025 earnings preview yesterday, the Wall Street consensus for this quarter was $22.279 billion in revenue and earnings of $0.40 per share.

The expectations had been significantly downgraded over the last month, as analysts were surprised by Tesla’s announcement of much lower deliveries than expected in the first quarter.

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How did Tesla do compared to expectations?

Tesla Q2 2025 financial results

After the market closed today, Tesla released its financial results for the first quarter and confirmed that it delivered on expectations with earnings of $0.40 per share (non-GAAP), and it exceeded revenue expectations with $22.496 billion during the last quarter.

Tesla’s earnings per share are down 23% year-over-year amid a booming EV market.

Operating income decreased 42% year-over-year to now less than $1 billion, and almost half of it came from regulatory credits.

Tesla’s cash on hand has decreased this quarter for the first time in years. The company lost about $200 million of its giant war chest – now sitting at $36.8 billion.

We will be posting our follow-up posts here about the earnings and conference call to expand on the most important points (refresh the page to see the most recent posts):

Here’s Tesla’s Q2 2025 shareholder presentation in full:

Here’s Tesla’s conference call for the Q2 2025 results:

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Tesla teleoperated robot failed while serving popcorn on first day of new diner

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Tesla teleoperated robot failed while serving popcorn on first day of new diner

Optimus, Tesla’s humanoid robot, which CEO Elon Musk claims is ahead of the industry and will sell in the trillions of dollars, failed while serving popcorn on the first day of Tesla’s new diner launch.

Musk has been touting Optimus as a revolutionary product that will generate “trillions of dollars” per year for Tesla.

It’s the latest pivot that the CEO has led Tesla into, as electric vehicle sales are declining, and it is becoming increasingly clear that its self-driving effort is unlikely to be profitable anytime soon.

The company needs new revenue streams to justify a $1 trillion valuation, given its declining revenue and earnings.

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However, we have been reporting on how the program appears to be in shambles lately.

Last month, Tesla’s head of the program, Milan Kovac, left the company just a few months after being promoted to vice-president.

Earlier this month, we learned that Tesla paused production to perform some much-needed upgrades to the current version of the robot, as it is reportedly currently only able to move some batteries within Tesla’s workshop at a rate lower than that of human workers.

That’s despite Tesla claiming for months that the robot is already performing useful work within its factories and plans to ramp up production to 100,000 units per month next year, with the goal of starting to sell the robot.

Aside from gullible Tesla shareholders, not many people believe this narrative. The main issue is that Tesla is not seen as having a lead in humanoid robots, which is still a nascent industry, and its previous demonstrations have been misleading.

For example, Tesla was less than forthcoming about its robots being teleoperated by humans during its ‘We, Robot’ event last year.

The launch of its new diner in Los Angeles was the latest occasion to showcase Optimus. Tesla had an Optimus robot serve popcorn to customers.

Again, Tesla employees at the event confirmed to attendees that the robot was teleoperated, which makes the demonstration unimpressive to start with, but the disappointment doesn’t stop there.

The robot was seen frozen and stopped operating during the first day of the Tesla diner launch.

Attendees were told that the robot lost connection.

Electrek’s Take

To be clear, Tesla can only get the Optimus robot to serve popcorn for a short period before it fails, even with the use of human teleoperation.

Yet, Musk claims that Tesla will make 100,000 of these next year and sell them to customers.

It makes no sense. It’s similar to Tesla’s robotaxi service in Austin, which requires teleoperation and a human safety monitor with a finger on a kill switch at all times.

That said, I honestly believe that Tesla will be able to scale Optimus faster than its robotaxi service. However, they will both scale much slower than Tesla shareholders currently believe and the competition is already ahead of both.

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Meet the BYD Atto 1 — A $12,000 EV for the masses

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Meet the BYD Atto 1 — A ,000 EV for the masses

BYD officially launched the Atto 1 in Indonesia on Wednesday. Starting at just $12,000 (IDR 195 million), the Atto 1 is now one of the most affordable EVs on the market.

BYD launches the Atto 1 entry-level EV

The Atto 1 is a rebadged version of BYD’s top-selling electric car in China, the Seagull EV. BYD’s smallest and most affordable EV is sold under the names Dolphin Mini and Dolphin Surf in other overseas markets.

BYD introduced the Atto 1 at the Gaikindo Indonesia International Auto Show (GIIAS) on Wednesday, priced from IDR 195 million, or about $12,000.

The new entry-level EV is available in two trims: Standard Range Dynamic and Long Range Premium. Powered by a 30.08 kWh BYD Blade battery, the standard range Atto 1 Dynamic offers a NEDC range of 300 km (186 miles).

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Upgrading to the Premium model costs IDR 235 million ($14,500), but it’s equipped with a bigger 38.88 kWh battery, providing an NEDC range of 380 km (236 miles).

BYD-Atto-1-EV
BYD Atto 1 EV (Source: BYD Indonesia)

The interior resembles that of other BYD brand vehicles, featuring a minimalist, high-tech smart cockpit. It features a 10.1″ intelligent touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, as well as a 7″ digital driver’s instrument display.

Meanwhile, the Long Range Premium version comes with an added wireless charging pad and a tilt-and-telescopic steering wheel.

BYD-Atto-1-EV
BYD Atto 1 interior (Source: BYD Indonesia)

At 3,959 mm long, 1,720 mm wide, and 1,590 mm tall, the Atto 1 is smaller than a Toyota Yaris, but slightly bigger than the Kia Picanto.

“This launch in Indonesia marks the first release of the Atto 1 in ASEAN, and the car is now available for pre-order,” BYD Indonesia’s operations director, Nathan Sun, said at the event.

BYD-Atto-1-EV

The Atto 1 is BYD’s third electric vehicle to arrive in Indonesia, and the brand’s most affordable yet. BYD also sells the Seal, starting at IDR 629 million, Atto 3 SUV (IDR 515 million), and Dolphin (IDR 425 million).

Indonesia is the largest auto market in Southeast Asia, and EV sales are picking up with new government policies supporting local production. In the first half of the year, the EV market share doubled to 10% from 5% in the same period last year.

Earlier today, Toyota, which controls around 30% of the Indonesian auto market, announced plans to begin building EVs locally by the end of 2025.

Source: JakartaGlobe, BYD Indonesia

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