View in browser
[Banners] Email Banners (3)

 

The EV Universe Report

Issue: 010

Welcome to the October edition of our newsletter, where we bring you the latest and greatest in the world of electric vehicles and charging infrastructure. In today’s report, we’ll tackle some exciting developments and critical updates: 

 

  • All the details you need to know about the Tesla robotaxi unveiling. 
  • Uber now has 182,000 EVs on its platform. 
  • North America’s first electric tow truck. 
  • EVBox and Enel X Way shut down. 
  • Tesla reaches 60,000 Superchargers globally. 
  • Voltera expands its portfolio with two new sites. 
  • IONNA debuts its first site and charger design. 

And a lot more. Keep reading and stay informed about the latest advancements and trends driving the future of transportation! 

 

If this newsletter is clipped in your inbox, click the “read online” button at the top right to view the full version conveniently online. 

 

Deep dive: All about the Tesla robotaxi launch and the details that came after  

    On October 10th, Tesla held its “We, Robot” event to showcase its fully autonomous robotaxi.

     

    The event was big on vision, but light on details, with two emergencies shortening the presentation. For a full story on the event, what we learned from engineers, and post-event insights from Tesla on socials, see Jaan’s deep dive here(link).

     

    Here is the Livestream for the whole event: (video). And, also, the recap:

     

    Tesla unveiled the 2-seater Cybercab, a fully autonomous EV without a steering wheel or pedals. Prototypes of a 20-passenger Robovan were also shown. Tesla gave 1,300 trips in Cybercabs over 3.5 hours at Warner Bros. lot, with zero incidents. (link) Here’s a POV ride video (video).

     

    The Cybercab’s design fits 90% of U.S. trips (single or double occupancy), while larger groups can use the Robovan. Elon Musk said the Cybercab will be available “before 2027” for under $30,000. You can “call it once & it’s yours as long as needed.”

     

    Key features: two padded seats, 20.5” center display, butterfly doors, large trunk, and front/rear lightbars. It will charge via inductive pads. The range is estimated at ~200 miles, with 5.5 mi/kWh efficiency. Front-wheel drive only.

     

    Tesla also demonstrated the use of automatic cleaning/charging hubs for robotaxis. The Cybercab runs on AI-5 hardware and has five cameras for full autonomy, with “close to production” AI software in [Full Self Driving] v13.

     

    The Robovan was the “one more thing,” designed like 1930s Art Deco trains, with 20-person capacity and adaptable use cases like school buses or RVs. Tesla filed trademarks for Robobus and Robotaxi on the same day (link).

     

    Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi commented on the potential partnership: “We’d love to have it on the platform...but we’ll see what Tesla does.” (link) 

     

    EV Fleet News

    Passenger EVs and Ride-Hailing 

     

    Uber now has 182,000 EVs on its platform today. In London, nearly 30% of all miles driven on Uber are now electric. Now they have launched a few new moves (link): 

    • All-electric Uber green: used to have hybrids, now only all-electrics. 
    • EV Preference: set the preference to get an EV every time, 
    • EV Pop-Ups: you might end up riding in a Lotus Eletre in London or a Rivian R1 in LA, Miami, and Dallas. 
    • Drivers get an AI Assistant for EV questions; 
    • EV mentorship program connecting experienced EV drivers to drivers new to EVs; 
    • Free Octopus chargers (worth ~£1,000 each), co-funded by BYD and Octopus Energy, for 1,000 Uber drivers in the UK. 

     

    Uber will start offering WeRide's robotaxis, first in Abu Dhabi by the end of this year. (link) Uber is out there fulfilling exactly what the CEO Dara Khosrowshahi has said they would — partner with all the AV players out there and be the one to “bring the demand and the user platform” 

     

    Lyft partners with Smartcar and introduces the “Rides in Range” feature so that the EV drivers would receive only ride requests that match their current battery capacity (20-mile buffer added). (link) 

     

    Lucid partners with Four Seasons to offer guests driving experiences, complimentary Lucid rentals, chauffeured Lucid house cars, and feature chargers in participating properties. (link) 

     

    PwC Belgium is adding 200 new Mini Cooper E EVs to its company fleet for young professionals by the end of this year, replacing 200 diesel-powered BMW 1 Series. (link) 

    Light & Medium Duty Commercial Vehicles 

     

    Hyundai and IVECO partner to launch Hyundai's eLCV platform as IVECO’s eMoovy vehicle in Europe. (link) The vehicle runs on the 800V platform and can travel 320 km (200 mi) on one charge. 

     

    BYD launched its first e-van for Europe at IAA, the E-Vali, in 3.5-tonne and 4.25-tonne versions. (link) A single-motor 150kW RWD and AWD with 150kW+100kW motor versions will be available, runs on an 80.6kWh LFP battery, and has 220-250km (155mi) range WLTP. What I like is that they also offer a 22kW AC charging option (great for fleets), and 188kW peak charging. This one also offers V2L with 3kW. 

     

    The seventh generation of the VW Transporter also finally features a fully electric version, the e-Transporter, and VW launched also the VW e-Caravelle (link). These are actually built on the Ford e-Transit platform, produced in Turkey. These come with 100kW, 160kW, and 210kW versions, and a 64kWh battery.  

     

    Heavy-Duty Trucks 

     

    DHL tests Tesla Semi trucks in two weeks and over 3,000 miles. They wrote that the trial vehicle averaged 1.72 kWh/mile operating at speeds exceeding 50 mph (80 km/h) on average for over half its time on the road and wrote: “Our verdict: The Tesla Semi is ready for prime time! Trial ends, planning begins. Following the successful trial phase, DHL Supply Chain USA is now carefully planning how we could best integrate these electric trucks into our network as Tesla gears up for large-scale production of the Semi in 2026." (link) 

     

    MAN handed over its very first Class 8 electric truck, the eTGX, a hundred years after the first diesel truck presentation. (link) It will be used by the haulage company Elflein to transport batteries from the Leipzig battery plant of the supplier Dräxlmaier to the Porsche plant for the electric Macan. MAN says it has 2,500 orders and order inquiries for the electric truck family.  

     

    Daimler Truck delivers 20 new Freightliner eCascadia Class 8 trucks to the Reyes Beverage Group in California with 9 more to be delivered by the end of the year. (link) 

     

    J.B Hunt added 20 Nikola Tre fuel cell trucks to its fleet, mainly to be used for port and drayage transport in California. (link) 

     

    J.B. Hunt also added a Freightliner eCascadia to a 100-mile Daimler Truck North America aftermarket parts supply route in Arizona. (link) 

     

    North America’s first 100% electric tow truck, from Lion Electric, is launched in Quebec, Canada for the CAA-Quebec service. (link) 

     

    Volvo Trucks North America has delivered 70 VNR electric trucks to several fleets in Southern California, as part of the “SWITCH-ON” project. Volvo Trucks has delivered over 570 Volvo VNR Electric trucks in 31 US states and Canadian provinces. (link) 

     

    Reading tip: Behind the scenes of Amazon’s hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles pilot in Germany, by Amazon (link). 

     

    The Netherlands: Simon Loos will expand its fleet of 60 electric trucks with 75 Mercedes-Benz eActros 600. (link) 

     

    In Germany, Duvenbeck becomes the first logistics company in Europe to integrate Farizon Homtruck (Geely’s subsidiary) into its service, starting with 50 electric trucks next year. (link) 

     

    Poland has received approval from the EIB for subsidy programs totaling 6 billion zlotys ($1.51B). The funds are to be used to build fast-charging infrastructure and to support the purchase of heavy-duty electric vehicles. (link) 

     

    Fortescue and Liebherr signed a $2.8B deal for 360 autonomous T264 electric trucks, 55 electric excavators, and 60 electric dozers for Fortescue’s mining operations in Western Australia. Fortescue also developed a 6MW charging system for these trucks. (link)

     

    Nikola Motor laid off 135 employees, 15% of its overall workforce. (link) Nikola wholesaled 88 Class 8 hydrogen fuel-cell trucks in the third quarter, bringing the total to 235 since it started sales in Q4 last year. 

     

    Here is an overview from BloombergNEF on the medium- and heavy-duty electric and fuel-cell truck sales: (link)  

     

    Charging Infrastructure

    Notable Updates

    EVBox, the Dutch charger manufacturer with both European and US operations, is being shut down by the French parent company Engie which acquired it back in 2017. 

     

    Per the latest EVbox statement (link), it is now in the process of selling the DC business arm, to be continued by EVTronic, which will take over the site in Bordeaux, France, and all its employees (100 in Bordeaux and 34 from other EVBox entities). 

     

    On the AC charging & Everon side, "EVBox would continue to meet its contractual warranty and after-sales service obligations for its product portfolio." 

    We can also assume its Libertyville, Illinois factory will shut down (or be acquired by another maker that wants to get the subsidies for local production? Remains to be seen). 

     

    This is no small news — founded in 2010, the company has sold 500,000 charging points worldwide, from AC to up to 480kW in most recent deployments, and has “more than 20,000 business customers”. 

     

    We’ve seen the consolidation — also through (or due to?) the inevitable commoditization of the charging hardware — coming for a while in this maturing industry, and we’ve witnessed quite a few of the early players go under this year. Tritium, Freewire Technologies, EnerCharge, and Enel X Way (Juicebox maker), to name some.  

     

    Here’s a comment from Robert van de Vegte, the co-founder of EVBox (link): 

    “As one of the co-founders of EVBOX, this is extremely sad news for me to hear. But it also makes me proud that we managed to grow the company from the “kitchen table” to one of the leading companies in the charging industry already back in 2012. I remember well our internal discussions at EVBOX back in 2014 when we made the decision to explore the opportunities for EVBOX in the US market. Time flies and hopefully, EVBOX will not be forgotten as one of the true pioneers of this industry.” 

     

     

    Enel X Way shut down the US & Canada arms on October 11th. Apps are closed, Juicebox home chargers are left without smart features (now only work as ‘dumb’ chargers), and commercial infrastructure will essentially be bricked as Enel discontinues all software. (link to statement) 

     

    If you are a commercial operator of any, I’ve seen other platforms like Wevo Energy, Chargelab, and Blink Charging offer free migration of these ‘orphaned chargers’ to their platform. Blink Charging advertises itself as: “When you sign up for a revenue share program, Blink covers the cost of your EV charging equipment, along with warranty and maintenance.” 

     

    Chargelab describes the situation a little better as well. (link) Note, that the company started as eMotorWerks, which was acquired by Enel in 2017. 

     

    Tesla installed a milestone 60,000th charger globally, in Japan. Next to it is the 600th Supercharger in Japan, and also the first V4 deployment in the country. (link)  Tesla also installed its first Supercharger in South America, in Chile. (link)  

    Those 60,000 Superchargers have made Tesla by far the largest fast and ultra-fast CPO in Europe and US. Here’s the top 10 for both regions: (link). Perhaps a surprising find on the European side is that the Lidl retail store chain has risen to become the 7th largest charging network in Europe. 

     

    Meanwhile, Tesla Giga Berlin built a 5,000m2 solar canopy with 2,639 solar panels (~1MW) on top of the part of its parking lot that houses chargers. Free for all EV drivers to use. (video) 

     

    Washington D.C. Council unanimously passed the “Comprehensive Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Access, Readiness, and Sustainability Amendment Act of 2023”, which – if signed by the Mayor – would require all new or substantially improved" commercial and multi-unit buildings to include setups for EV chargers in parking garages or lots, if they have them, and provide dedicated EV parking spaces there (link).  

     

    The bill also establishes an Electric Vehicle Charging Incentive Program for property owners. Also, any new or substantially renovated gas station in the District projected to sell more than one million gallons of gasoline per year will now have to add one 150 kW DC fast-charging station with two plugs from October 2025 onward. 

     

    Siemens plans to carve out its eMobility business, combining it with Heliox (which it acquired earlier this year) into a dedicated legal structure to “increase agility, focus, and growth in the EV charging infrastructure market.” (link) 

     

    Watch tip: Kyle from Out of Spec shares a 1h video on them installing their new XCharge NZS 200kWh battery integrated DC charger — they only have a 19kW grid connection. 

     

    Alpitronic opens its US HQ, in Charlotte, North Carolina. Here’s the State of Charge video from the spot.  

     

    An evpoint charger in the UK, supplied by BYD, is found not only showing BYD ads on the screens but also blasting the video sound from added speakers (video). CPOs, please do not make this our future. 

     

    Watch tip(s): Here are all the keynote presentations, both slides and videos, of the intercharge network conference that took place in September in Berlin. (link)  

     

    A study on the UK’s charging infrastructure got an update, Green Finance Institute maps out utilization data based on ZapMap, for the different power ratings (9-page pdf) 

     

    Chinese companies have registered 62,655 EV charging technology patents; Japan has 5,568 applications; USA has 4,306; Germany has 3,973 and South Korea has 3,942. (link) 

     

    New Products

    XCharge North America debuts the GridLink bidirectional charger. It can deliver up to 300kW and has an LFP energy storage system of 215 kWh (which can be expanded to 430kWh) (link). 

     

    Chargetrip launches a new “range spider” tool, which describes your range visually, instead of just a number. It lets you select your specific EV model from their search, set a location, if needed your battery %, and then see what the actual range of the vehicle looks like from said location. It’s a smart tool since they are doing EV routing anyway, so it also accounts for weather (choose summer, winter, or current forecast), elevation of the route, road surface, driving speed, and so on. Now, they also provide API access so you could essentially white-label this and show the range to your customer on your website — just like LiveWire did: (link). 

     

    Ford creates “Ford Power Promise”, and says every new Ford EV comes with a complimentary home charger now, including a free standard install. Jim puts it into a little story here. 

     

    ClearBlue Markets launches an EV Credit Aggregator solution to make it easier for smaller EV charging infra owners to participate in CFR’s carbon credits system. (link) 

     

    EVgo and its long-time technology partner Delta Electronics sign an MoU to co-develop next-gen charging architecture, which includes “advanced software, all-in-one power electronics, contactless payment interface, ultra high-power 400kW dispensers, and extended cable length that allows for more maneuverability to easily reach any charge port location on all EV models.” (link) 

     

    ChargePoint announced a lower-cost fleet charging solution priced at $699 – a ChargePoint CPF50 L2 charger and access to ChargePoint’s fleet management software which “includes real time-visibility of vehicle readiness, power usage and station status; energy management tools to maximize fuel savings; control station access.” (link) 

    Infrastructure Deployments Plans and Partnerships

     

    North America

     

    Voltera acquired two new ZEV infrastructure development sites, expanding the total portfolio to 22 sites strategically positioned across key transit hubs in California, Texas, Georgia, Arizona, and Florida. (link) 

     

    The first added site, in Wilmington CA, is located four miles from Port of Long Beach and five miles from Port of LA, accommodates up to 30 electrified stalls, and already secured up to 5MW power supply. Voltera also secured $4.1M in grants for the site.  

     

    The second site, in West Sacramento CA, is strategically positioned close to the I-5 and the I-80 highways. It holds up to 100 electrified charging stalls and has secured a power supply of 1MW. 

     

     

     

    about_voltera_map

    IONNA, the joint charging venture of BMW, General Motors, Honda, Hyundai, Mercedes-Benz, Kia, Stellantis, and Toyota, has announced its first site, near its HQ in Apex, NC. It’s called a “Rechargery” and features 10x400kW charging bays with both CCS and NACS connectors (link). The site, historically a gas station, will host an indoor driver's lounge, offering secure access to bathrooms, coffee service, food/beverage, and WIFI. IONNA also announced Jackie Slope joins as CTO. IONNA also just unveiled the design and features of their (Alpitronic) charging dispensers. (link) 

     

    Terawatt Infrastructure opens its first full-build charging site with 29 DC chargers from ABB to serve light-duty fleets in Inglewood, three miles from LA International Airport (LAX). Terawatt is currently developing 15 sites across several states, including the I-10 corridor from the Port of Long Beach in Los Angeles, California to El Paso, Texas. (link) 

     

    Kwik Trip introduces Kwik Charge for its EV customers at select Midwest locations. (link) 

     

    Blink Charging rolls out Stable Auto software across its EV charging network to increase site utilization, by “ensuring that Blink and its customers’ chargers will thrive by improving access and providing fair and appropriate pricing tailored to regional energy costs and driver demand.” (link)  

     

    Electrify America announced the opening of the Electrify America Technology Campus, located near the company’s headquarters in Northern Virginia. The new larger location spans more than 32,000 square feet, featuring 22 Hyper-Fast chargers and a new Technology Development Lab. (link) 

     

    Toyota and Revel partner to give Toyota and Lexus owners free charging at Revel’s fast chargers in New York City for three years. (link) Revel currently offers 64 fast chargers in NYC and is planning to grow to 300. Context: Toyota Ventures also invested in Revel in 2019.  

     

    Nissan is joining (investing) in the BMW/Ford/Honda-founded ChargeScape, for grid integration of EVs in North America. (link) Each now has 25% equity.  

     

    Nissan announces a new NACS adapter for Ariya, and the “Nissan Energy Charge Network”, allowing owners of the Ariya SUV and future Nissan EVs to use their MyNISSAN app to find charging stations, see real-time charger availability, and pay for charging across 90k+ chargers in the US. (link) 

     

    Florida Department of Energy Management installed 10 temporary free EV chargers along the I-75 evacuation corridor, and one off of I-4, as Hurricane Milton is making landfall right now. Each is a single port, fast charger with adapters capable of charging all EVs, with a 50 kW power output. (link) 

     

    Rove has opened its first “full-service” EV charging center in Santa Ana, California, with 40 fast chargers, a Gelson’s fresh market, a 222kW solar canopy, 4MWh of battery storage, a 24/7 lounge, and a dedicated support staff. (link) 

     

    Roaming: ‘Mercedes me Charge’ now has 2 million charging points connected (link). 

    Europe & Elsewhere 

      Milence opens its first heavy-duty charging hub in Sweden, marking the fourth open in Europe so far. The station has 4x400kW chargers with two charging connectors each, and, as common for their site designs,  plans to add more CCS and MCS chargers in the second phase in 2025. (link) 

       

      Vianeo and APRR have officially launched the first truck charging corridor between Paris and Lyon, with charging stations ~150km, and five rest stops with 480kW chargers.  

       

      Fastned won a tender to build out one of the largest charging hubs in Denmark, which can charge 20 cars simultaneously at up to 400kW. It will also feature two dedicated truck charging lanes. Opens in mid-2025. (link) 

       

      The UK now has more than 70,000 public charge points available, up 43% YoY (link). Especially notable here is the 114% growth of the Ultra-Rapid (150kW+) points.  

       

      E.ON Drive Infrastructure has launched its first EV charging hub in Wales, offering 10 ultra-fast 300kW charging bays. (link) 

       

      Oslo will subsidize the construction of ten new fast chargers for electric trucks. Specifically, Fastcharge will receive NOK 13.5 million (€1.1 million) for the construction of two hubs. 

       

      The Netherlands will subsidize heavy-duty EV charging stations with €57M through two funding programs. (link) 

       

      Nuvve plans to install approximately 100 V2G charging stations as part of the EVVE project in Europe. The EVVE project plans to deploy 800 bidirectional chargers across Europe in total. (link) 

       

      Be. EV will build 38 ultra-rapid chargers at four shopping centers in the UK in a £3.5M deal. (link) 

       

      Tesla launched its first pre-fabricated charging site in the APAC region, in Bordertown, Southern Australia. (link) A quick explainer on pre-fab: all the hardware (posts and cabinet) is fitted to a steel base offsite which is then easily slotted into place on-site and wired into the grid. 

      Global News Roundup

       

      European Union member states voted on the Chinese EV import tariffs, reportedly 10 countries FOR; 12 abstentions, and 5 countries AGAINST. 

       

      To block the proposal, a representation of 65% of the EU population votes against would’ve been needed, but this didn’t happen — the tariffs go into effect (should enter into force in early November and last for at least five years). Here are the countries’ votes: (link). Most notably, Germany voted against these tariffs. 

       

      China and the EU continue their negotiations, with the most recent news saying the EU side rejected China’s proposal for a minimum €30,000 price to be set on Chinese EVs instead of the tariffs. (link) 

       

      ICCT finds manufacturers need 28% BEV share to meet European CO2 targets. (link) On average, the whole fleet from the 10 larger automakers needs to drop their average gCO2/km by 12%, from about 16% in 2023 to ~28% in 2025. Ford and VW have the most work to do, dropping their average by about 21%.  

       

      Per the US Department of Energy, of all the EV sales in 2023 in the US, per the US Department of Energy, 40.4% were small SUVs (& 12.2% were standard SUVs), 21.2% were midsize cars, 11.7% were small station wagons, 8.3% were large cars, and just 3.4% were pickup trucks. (link) I expect the pickup truck category to change significantly in 2024 numbers. 

       

      Meanwhile, According to Cox Automotive, an estimated 346,3091 EVs were sold in the US in Q3 2024, a 5% increase from Q2. The EV share of sales in Q3 hit 8.9%, the highest level recorded and an increase from 7.8% in Q3 2023. 

       

      The United Kingdom government confirms the plans that purely ICE car sales will be phased out in 2030, but ‘some hybrids’ will be allowed until 2035. (link) 

       

      Graph: the overview of the progress towards EVs in Norway from 2011 to today per powertrain: (link)  

       

      The Tesla Model Y is now very close to becoming the #1 bestselling vehicle in the US, of any fuel type, according to new data from Experian — with a 2.8% market share, just slightly below the Toyota RAV4. (link) It’ll also make this likely the first year since 1982 that the Ford F-150 doesn’t come out at the top.  

       

      Watch tip: Firefighters training to crack Cybertruck's windows, invited to try it by ALSET Collision. Took 3 swings for the first crack to form, and 12+ to actually break through.  

       

      Two stories to read: 

      • Here’s the story of a Rivian R1T in Asheville North Carolina that was swept 100 yards in the flood of the Hurricane Helene aftermath. Works perfectly. (link) 
      • And a story on how the pop band A-ha created Norway’s EV revolution through a campaign of civil disobedience. (link) 

      About The EV Universe

       

      This newsletter is made in collaboration with The EV Universe visit their website to stay up to date on the latest EV news. 

       

      Connect With Us

      Explore

      Home

      Solutions

      News + Insights

      About

      Careers

        Get in Touch

        Sales

        Press

        Careers

        General Inquiries

        Follow Us

          LinkedIn
          X
          Facebook
          Instagram

          Voltera, 117 University Avenue, Palo Alto, California 94301

          Unsubscribe Manage preferences