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Tesla axes most of Supercharg­er team in blow to other automakers

- By Dana Hull, Ed Ludlow and Keith Naughton (With assistance from David Welch and Craig Trudell.)

Tesla Inc. eliminated almost its entire Supercharg­er organizati­on, which has built a vast network of public charging stations that virtually every major automaker is in the process of tapping into in the US.

The decision to cut the nearly 500-person group, including its senior director, Rebecca Tinucci, was made by Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk in the last week, according to a person familiar with the matter. It comes in addition to the more than 10% staff cut ordered in mid-April, the person said.

The move will slow the network’s growth, according to a person familiar with the division, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters. There are already discussion­s about rehiring some of those affected in order to operate the existing network and grow it at a much slower rate, the person said. In a post on X, Musk confirmed network growth would slow.

The job cuts have left executives at at least one other automaker, Rivian Automotive Inc., confused and concerned, according to another person familiar with internal company discussion­s. Rivian, Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Co. are among the carmakers adopting Tesla’s charging connectors for their battery-powered cars, giving thousands of customers access to the Tesla charging network.

Vehicles from those automakers were initially designed to use a standard called the Combined Charging System. There are fewer CCS chargers in the US than Tesla Supercharg­ers, which use what Tesla has called the North American Charging Standard. Tesla’s infrastruc­ture is also considered faster and more reliable.

The job eliminatio­ns mean Rivian, Ford and others have lost their main points of contact in Tesla’s charging unit shortly before the kickoff of the busy summer driving season. Tinucci was one of the main executives building and managing outside partnershi­ps and was thought of highly, two people who had worked with her inside and outside of Tesla said.

Bloomberg confirmed that Tinucci was no longer listed on internal organizati­onal charts as of Tuesday. One of Tesla’s highestran­king female executives, she spoke at the company’s Investor Day in March 2023. She didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Some of the Supercharg­er servicing team, which manages third-party access to the network, remains intact, according to one of the people. Tesla has been building CCS-to-NACS

adapters in Buffalo, New York, and shipping them to partnering carmakers. Companies that have signed charging contracts with Tesla are mostly using the adapters as a shortterm fix. For example, Ford EV customers can use the Supercharg­er network with an adapter now, and the NACS charge port will be built into the vehicles beginning in 2025.

Rivian and Ford are both still shipping adapters to their customers, according to statements from the companies. Ford told its EV owners on Friday, before the eliminatio­n of the broader Tesla Supercharg­er team, that deliveries may be delayed in some cases due to supplier constraint­s.

Access to high-speed charging is critical to EV adoption, and Tesla invested billions of dollars into developing a global network of Supercharg­ers that became the envy of other automakers. It’s also a critical driver of Tesla sales, and the carmaker pointed to the division’s growth during its firstquart­er results just last week.

“Starting at the end of February, we began opening our North American Supercharg­er Network to more non-Tesla EV owners,” Tesla noted in its shareholde­r deck.

The Musk-led company has also signed charging partnershi­ps with carmakers including Stellantis NV, Volvo, Polestar, Kia, Honda, Mercedes-Benz and BMW. It’s not clear who will now oversee Tesla’s partnershi­ps with those companies. GM, Volvo and Polestar were all due to open NACS chargers to their customers in the immediate future, according to Tesla’s website.

Tesla had 6,249 Supercharg­er stations and more than 57,000 connectors as of the end of the first quarter. It has more fast chargers in the US than all other providers combined, according to BloombergN­EF.

The Informatio­n first reported the Supercharg­er team cuts, citing a memo from Musk.

 ?? Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images/TNS ?? A Tesla Model S sedan is plugged into a Tesla Supercharg­er electrical vehicle charging station in Falls Church, Virginia.
Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images/TNS A Tesla Model S sedan is plugged into a Tesla Supercharg­er electrical vehicle charging station in Falls Church, Virginia.

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