How Tesla Is Supercharging Itself

Credit to Author: Guest Contributor| Date: Sat, 24 Aug 2019 03:58:02 +0000

Published on August 23rd, 2019 | by Guest Contributor

August 23rd, 2019 by  

Originally published on EVANNEX.
by Shankar Narayanan

Building an electric vehicle charging station is not a simple task. And the task becomes even harder if you’re planning to build a network of charging stations around the world. According to a UBS  published in early 2017, the cost to build a supercharging station is a cool $250,000.

Tesla Supercharger in Florida, by Zach Shahan, CleanTechnica.

When Tesla started selling its cars, it would’ve been more than happy to get a third party to share the burden of building charging stations. But who else would’ve been ready to invest hundreds of thousands of dollars (per station) and wait years before recouping their investment? Add the fact that electric cars, like Tesla, were viewed as huge unknowns ten years ago — no one really knew, at the time, how car buyers accustomed to a gas-powered paradigm would respond to an alternative technology.

A vicious cycle ensued.

Without a charging network, long-distance travel would have remained a pipe dream, and without long-distance travel, Tesla would find itself tagged as a city car, thereby reducing demand. And without demand, Tesla couldn’t expand its charging network.

Tesla knew this early on — they’d have to “go it alone” without any outside support. So the company took the burden upon itself to build a network of supercharging stations.

Thankfully, Tesla’s grand ambitions sparked the company to invest in an ever-growing supercharger network over the years. By the end of 2014, Tesla had just  supercharger stations worldwide; by 2016, it had grown to 790 stations; and by June 2019, Tesla increased that number to .

Tesla may have  missed its own expansion targets, but the data above show that the company has been steadily expanding its footprint of supercharging stations all around the world, while implementing technology improvements to reduce charging time.

Tesla introduced V3 supercharging in , a new charging architecture that allows Tesla’s cars to charge at up to 250 kW rate. According to Tesla, “At this rate, a Model 3 Long Range operating at peak efficiency can recover up to 75 miles of charge in 5 minutes and charge at rates of up to 1,000 miles per hour.”

Tesla may have only doubled the size of its supercharger network between December 2016 and June 2019, from 790 stations to 1,587 stations, but if the company upgrades all its stations to V3 superchargers, it would essentially double the strength of its network, as V3 superchargers offer a 50% improvement in charging time compared to the company’s previous generation supercharging tech.

“We expect the average charging session at our powerful V3 superchargers will drop to around 15 minutes, which will effectively double the overall throughput rate per stall compared to our V2 superchargers, easily keeping pace with our fleet growth,” the company  in its 2Q 2019 shareholder letter.

Five minutes to gain 75 miles of charge is a major achievement as it will have a huge impact on Tesla (and EV) adoption in the future. According to the American Driving Survey  in 2015, “On average, Americans drive 29.2 miles per day, making two trips with an average total duration of 46 minutes.”

A five-minute pit stop at a V3 supercharger station is more than enough to power two days of driving (on average). Tesla already reduced range anxiety from its customer base by offering long range vehicles, and every additional supercharging station will continue to strengthen customer confidence and the charging network. Tesla’s only real challenge regarding supercharging network expansion will be to keep pace with its sales growth. 
 




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