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The most affordable Tesla may have been canceled. Again.
According to a report Friday morning from Reuters, citing three sources familiar with the matter, the company has ceased plans to build a $25,000 Tesla that would slot below the Model 3 and Model Y in the lineup.
In January, Tesla made a call to suppliers, also according to Reuters, for an affordable Tesla set to arrive in 2025, codenamed Redwood and implying a total annual output for the model of more than 500,000 units.
In a presentation and Q&A for investors a day later neither the company nor Musk discussed the $25,000 Tesla project itself, but he did provide a little more background on the vehicle as a key for the company’s growth, as part of the company’s next-generation platform.
“It’s worth noting that if you look at the average selling price of the other top-selling vehicles in the world, they are much lower-priced than the Model Y,” Musk said then, referring to the Toyota RAV4 and Corolla, and the Honda Civic. “So people are really stretching their wallets to be able to afford a Tesla.”
At that time Musk boasted of the next-generation, cost-cutting platform that Tesla was turning to, likely for that vehicle plus others, set to go into production in the second half of 2025 with a “revolutionary new manufacturing line” at its Texas plant, with “next-level” manufacturing arrangement that will be “head-and-shoulders above any other manufacturing technology that exists anywhere in the world.”
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The project or platform wasn’t a surprising new development. Tesla made the idea of a “compelling” $25,000 Tesla, including fully autonomous driving capability, the focus of its 2020 Battery Day, enabled partly by the scaling-up of large-format batteries and improved chemistries—including LFP—and at that time it said the model was due in three years.
Since setting the original 2023 arrival timeline, Tesla has sent conflicting signals on the project, which was confirmed by a top Tesla executive in China in 2021 as under development there. A year later, Musk confirmed the much-touted third vehicle platform, which would allow future Tesla EVs to cost half as much to make, would allow for smaller, affordable vehicles and said that production volume for it would exceed that of all other vehicles combined.
Making a profitable EV at a significantly lower price is seen as one of the keys for Tesla to be able to compete in several new markets, including India.
Tesla doesn’t respond to media requests for comments, although it’s surely one that financial analysts will push Tesla executives about at the next financial call, set for April 23. Breaking down this potential loss of future volume, in the context of Tesla’s worst quarter since pandemic shutdowns, it’s going to be a big one.
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