(Bloomberg) — Chris Bowe needed a quick charge before climbing over the Santa Cruz Mountains in his Ford F-150 Lightning on his drive home to the San Francisco Bay area.
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So he pulled into Tesla’s Supercharger station in Scotts Valley, which has 16 stalls. It’s one of just two locations on the West Coast that is open to drivers with the latest innovation from Tesla Inc.: the Magic Dock.
Magic Dock is a Tesla connector that allows other EVs to use the company’s extensive charger network. It’s hardware that’s added to the charging station itself — there’s no need for drivers to carry an adapter in the trunk.
“I plug it into my truck, and it just works,” said Bowe, 49, a senior manager at FedEx. “You hear the Magic Dock click and latch into place and it starts charging. It’s beautiful.”
Tesla, which is headquartered in Austin, is known for its sleek electric cars. The company led by CEO Elon Musk sold more than 1.3 million vehicles globally in 2022 and aims to sell at least 1.8 million in 2023. The first Blade Runner-esque Cybertrucks are slated to be handed over later this year.
But Tesla’s low-key and ubiquitous Superchargers, which now cover much of North America, Asia, Europe and the Middle East, are proving to be the shrewdest, and most strategic, product of all. Tesla dominates EV sales in the US and, not surprisingly, is conquering reliable fast-charging. At the end of the first quarter, the company had nearly 5,000 charger stations and more than 45,000 charging stalls or connectors globally, according to company filings. Many are located off of freeways in shopping plazas, and they often have several stalls for charging.
But it’s not just the Magic Dock. In recent weeks, two of Tesla’s biggest rivals — Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Co. — announced they will partner with Tesla on charging. In both cases, Ford and GM customers can buy a Tesla-made adapter that will allow them to access more than 12,000 Superchargers starting early next year. And in 2025, Tesla’s unique charging port will be built into Ford and GM’s electric vehicles. Selling a car is one thing; selling consumers an EV charging experience is another, and one that provides an ongoing revenue stream. Tesla may rake in as much as $3 billion a year from charging other manufacturers’ EVs by 2030, according to Piper Sandler & Co.
Mary Barra, the chief executive officer of GM, joined Musk on Twitter — which Musk owns — on Thursday to announce her company’s new partnership. “Not only will it help make the transition to electric vehicles more seamless for our customers, but it could help move the industry toward a single North American Charging Standard,” she said.
In unveiling his company’s deal in May, Ford CEO Jim Farley mentioned “reliability” more than once and said he was “really pumped.”
“We don’t want the Tesla Supercharger network to be like a walled garden,” Musk said during the event with Farley. “We want to be supportive of electrification and sustainable transport in general.”
Tesla is the largest installer of ultra-fast chargers in the US, according to BloombergNEF, accounting for 71% of installations in 2022. BNEF’s latest Electric Vehicle Outlook 2023, published last week, forecasts that electric models in the US will make up nearly 28% of passenger vehicle sales by 2026, up from 7.6% in 2022.
More EVs on the roads means that more cars will be sharing the nation’s chargers. In its report, BNEF said that support for charging infrastructure needs to be expanded “dramatically, including for remote and otherwise under-served locations.”
The White House—eager to spur adoption of EVs—announced the federal National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure program earlier this year, which allocates $5 billion to states to build out fast charging. As part of that announcement, Tesla pledged to make at least 3,500 new and existing Superchargers open to non-Tesla EVs.
“We have understood since day one that a great charging experience is the linchpin to electric vehicle adoption,” said Rebecca Tinucci, who leads Tesla’s charging infrastructure team, at the company’s investor day in March. “Getting here meant we spent 10 years building charging infrastructure when basically no one else in the industry would do it.”
In September 2012, Musk unveiled Tesla’s first six Superchargers. Constructed in secret, the early sites were along California highway corridors in cities like Folsom and Gilroy. Forget range anxiety: Tesla wanted to make it easy for its customers to go on long road trips.
“This is not some figment of the imagination,” Musk said during the splashy launch event at Tesla’s design studio near Los Angeles. “I think this day will actually go down as being quite historic. I want you to get out there and spread the word. People have this idea that if you have an electric car that you have no freedom, that you’re stuck. There’s this idea that you can’t go anywhere. What we’re showing here today is that you have more freedom than anything.”
Eleven years later, Tesla’s decision to invest billions of dollars into owning and operating its own charging network has given it a formidable edge in the US over automotive and charging rivals alike. Charging companies like Electrify America, EVgo Inc. and ChargePoint Holdings Inc. have struggled with the perception — and reality — that they are not as dependable as Tesla.
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“Ford and GM’s partnership with Tesla reinforces the message that there are still issues with reliability for other charging providers,” said John Gartner, senior director at the Center for Sustainable Energy. “What sets Tesla apart is the reliability. Tesla made the investment: they are both the automaker and the charging network operator, and their customers are one and the same. No one else has done it as boldly, as comprehensively or with the quality as Tesla to date.”
While other automakers spent millions on Super Bowl ads, Tesla studded the national landscape with chargers emblazoned with the Tesla logo that it designed itself, with a seamless user experience in mind.
“From a marketing standpoint, Tesla’s Superchargers are a huge advantage,” said Owuraka Koney, managing director at Jennison Associates LLC, a major investor that has held Tesla shares since 2011. “Range anxiety is still an issue for consumers, and access to Supercharging helps to drive demand for Tesla right now.”
There are two charging options in the US: Tesla’s, and what’s known as CCS, or the Combined Charging System. Last fall, Tesla invited automotive and charging-network rivals to add the Tesla connector to their vehicles and equipment. Tesla went so far as to call its option NACS, or the North American Charging Standard.
At first, it didn’t seem like anyone would take Tesla up on its offer. In March, Tesla showed off the Magic Dock as part of its investor day. The rollout of the Magic Dock has been slow and deliberate: the company’s website shows just 11 locations, two in California and nine in New York.
But behind the scenes, there was momentum. Ford’s Jim Farley told CNBC that he had been working with Tesla “for a couple of years” on the charging deal. The announcement from GM makes it increasingly likely that Tesla’s standard will become the prevailing charging standard in the US.
A recent road trip from Oakland, California, to Los Angeles shows just how vast Tesla’s charging advantage — and opportunity — is. Harris Ranch, located on Interstate 5, is the go-to place to charge between the Bay Area and LA, and that’s the first place I stopped with a Model Y rented from Hertz to charge up. The cattle ranch and resort has 98 Superchargers installed, making it the largest Supercharger station in the world. There didn’t appear to be any Magic Docks, but it was easy to imagine them being integrated into the existing chargers.
Just 27 miles down the road is another Supercharger in Kettleman City. This location is famous for its comfortable lounge, which is exclusively for use by Tesla owners: you need the company’s app to access a code that you punch into the locked door to enter.
On a Friday afternoon, the lounge was staffed by cheerful baristas whipping up cappuccinos and mochas. There was free wi-fi, clean bathrooms and roughly half a dozen black leather chairs to sit in. Outdoor tables with large umbrellas provided shade. While waiting for my iced latte, I browsed the rack of merchandise: mostly black t-shirts featuring Tesla’s products as well as a few baseball hats and beanie caps.
On my 880-mile round-trip drive to and from LA, I charged the car five times: at Harris Ranch, and once in downtown LA. On the way home, I took the far slower but more scenic Highway 101 route, charging in Oxnard, San Luis Obispo and Gilroy. The Model Y preconditioned the battery as I navigated to the nearest charger, and every charger worked.
Tesla, which has $22 billion in cash, is aggressively expanding its network and adds new locations nearly every day. The company is working on quicker charge times, as well as a trip planning feature that optimizes Supercharging site utilization.
Tinucci ended her investor day presentation with an architectural rendering of a Tesla-branded drive-in diner with Superchargers and an outdoor movie theater. It’s not just fantasy: Tesla has filed planning documents for a Tesla West Hollywood Diner with the city of Los Angeles.
Tesla has long pushed the envelope of what the fueling of the future will be. But now Tesla customers will have to share the network that has been theirs, exclusively, for so long.
It remains to be seen how this culture clash will play out. Will Tesla continue to roll out Magic Dock? Will Tesla enact a two-tiered billing system: one charging rate for Tesla owners, and a second, more expensive rate for Ford and GM customers? Will lounges like the one in Kettleman City eventually open to non-Tesla owners? Tesla didn’t respond to inquiries for this story.
But the Magic Dock offers some lessons. The charging port on a Tesla is on the driver’s side of the vehicle, in the back, so you back up close to the Supercharger. Most other EVs on the road today have their charging ports located at the front of the car.
“I was very aware that I am not a Tesla owner,” Bowe said of charging his Ford Lightning in Scotts Valley. “I had to pull nose-in and use the stall to my right, when the correct stall would have been the one to the left. So basically I was taking up two spots, and was using the ‘wrong’ charger.”
John Gartner said that Tesla must strike a balance, keep loyal Tesla customers happy while sharing the Supercharging bounty with other EV owners.
“At what point do you dilute the customer experience?” Gartner asked. “If you open it up to everyone, then it’s no longer special.”
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