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Transportation Power

GM Electric Vehicles Can Now Use Tesla Superchargers (msn.com) 26

The Washington Post reports that electric vehicles made by General Motors now can use Tesla's Superchargers. (GM's charger adapters "will first be made available to customers in the United States, followed by availability for Canadian customers later this year.") The Post writes that the move "expands the number of vehicles compatible with the North American Charging Standard developed by Tesla" — and also marks "another step forward for efforts to settle on a universal public charger network for battery-powered cars and trucks in the U.S.

"It could also allay some GM customers' concerns about a lack of charging options." The new changes take effect immediately, along with sales of the GM-approved power adapters... The deal makes roughly 17,800 Tesla Superchargers available to drivers of GM-manufactured vehicles such as the Chevy Bolt, Cadillac Lyriq and Silverado EV, with the help of an adapter that costs $225... GM estimates that the partnership with Tesla contributes to an overall network of 231,800 fast chargers across the United States available to drivers of its vehicles. GM is also part of IONNA, a joint venture of eight automakers that plans to build at least 30,000 high-powered chargers nationwide.
GM's statement calls it "a move that will help accelerate fast and convenient charging options for current and future EV drivers." And the move comes 15 months after GM announced it was adopting the standard — a move followed within weeks by similar announcements from Rivian, Ford, Volvo, Nissan, Hyundai and Kia. "Ford and Rivian have started distributing adapters for their EVs," the Washington Post points out, "while others, such as BMW, Honda, Hyundai and Mercedes-Benz have promised to start making their vehicles compatible this year or next."

"Knowing we will now have access to Tesla Supercharger locations means that range anxiety has now virtually evaporated..." argues a Chevy owner at CleanTechnica: This is mostly good news for drivers of electric cars from GM. Tesla and The General have been bitter enemies in the past, with GM opposing Tesla's direct sales model in many states. The once fierce battle has cooled in recent years, but GM essentially won by keeping Tesla from selling direct to the public in several US states, including its new home of Texas. Nevertheless, the two companies are now cooperating, which is a bonus for drivers...

Despite some niggling concerns, this is a big deal for EV drivers in North America. Tesla Superchargers are the gold standard in the industry today. There are fast, reliable, and always located in clean, well-lit places where restrooms and fresh foods are available. This could very well change the conversation about electric cars to the point where by the time GM, Ford, and Stellantis get their plug-in hybrids into showrooms, the demand for them will have shrunk considerably.

One GM executive says in this week's statement that "GM's ongoing efforts to help accelerate the expansion of public charging infrastructure is an integral part of our commitment to an all-electric future."

GM Electric Vehicles Can Now Use Tesla Superchargers

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  • hahaha so true, I pulled up map of Chicago area and the whites and asians have conveniently located chargers, the well-to-do whites and asians LOTS of them, but if you're black apparently they think you should just fuck off

  • by MpVpRb ( 1423381 ) on Sunday September 22, 2024 @12:01PM (#64807671)

    ...it may make life more difficult for Tesla owners in the short term
    We need LOTS more chargers, and they need to be reliable and properly maintained

    • The chargers need to be where people sleep.

      The idea that your everyday charger is going to be out "on the road" somewhere, and you're going to be competing for a spot with random people, is a holdover from the days of gasoline fuel. It's not necessary and it's the cause of range anxiety, which is also making EVs worse than they need to be (more weight, higher cost.)

      • Yes chargers where people sleep are important, but so are DC Fast Chargers. If you drive over ~250 miles in a day more than once every three months then superchargers are critical to adoption. If the drive is entirely on interstates today you can likely pull it off, but if you have more than 100 miles on state or local roads you are generally out of luck.

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        The problem is that there another, unrelated idea and that is to prevent the average person from owning their own place to sleep. When you rent it, you can't decide whether there's a charger there or not.

        Of course, cars are becoming unaffordable just like housing is, so perhaps the problem is short term regardless.

  • Yeah, but they'd be consuming Elon Musk's Nazi electricity! Oh wait, that's never been a problem for General Motors, has it? https://hbswk.hbs.edu/archive/... [hbs.edu]
    • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

      From your link:
      "Did Alfred P. Sloan’s brainchild collude with the Nazis?
      No, is the short answer from Yale historian Henry Ashby Turner Jr."

      The article then goes on to say that Germany basically nationalized Opel, kicking out the Americans. Kind of like what Venezuela did to GM in 2007.

  • It's annoying that you "need permission" to access a charging network. If you have a compatible physical connector, compatible protocol, and a payment method you should be allowed to access any charging network. This should include "point of sale" payment too, not "you have to create an account and have an app" nonsense.

    We need "gas station" equivalent charging on the highways, every 50 miles or so. If you had this, most charging concerns go away. I have tons of "local" charging around where I live, whe

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