MMH    Topics 

Tesla Semi All-Electric Truck Arriving in September

Tesla CEO Elon Musk confirmed today that the company plans to unveiled its all-electric semi truck, called ‘Tesla Semi’, in September.


Tesla CEO Elon Musk says his company will unveil its electric tractor-trailer truck this September, calling the vehicle “seriously next level” and praising the Tesla team for doing “an amazing job.”

He also revealed that Tesla will show off an electric pickup truck in “18 to 24 months,” and that the next Tesla roadster sports car will be a convertible.

Musk said last year in its second quarter earnings report that the company would be unveiling the Tesla Semi as well as a Model X-based Tesla minibus at some point in 2017.

“We expect to unveil those for the middle of next year, maybe the next six to nine months type of thing. And then [we’d] have a better, more fleshed-out plan for when those would enter production,” Musk said on the call last August.

The Tesla CEO had mentioned a possible unveiling in 2017 when he announced the vehicles in his updated “Tesla Master Plan” - a follow-up to the goal-specific mission statement that he published for the company back in 2006.

As reported by Business Insider, this isn't the first time we've heard Tesla express interest in building a semi-truck.

Tesla CTO JB Straubel

“There’s no reason that today you can’t make a very compelling electric truck”Tesla CTO JB Straubel

Again, Musk first announced the semi-truck project in his "Master Plan, Part Deux" released during July of last year.

"We believe the Tesla Semi will deliver a substantial reduction in the cost of cargo transport, while increasing safety and making it really fun to operate," Musk wrote in the plan.

Musk said in February that the company was making progress on its semi-truck. Jerome Guillen, Tesla's vice president of programs, is leading the company's semi-truck product.

Tesla CTO JB Straubel has also discussed the role Tesla can play in the trucking industry.

"I can’t say too much about the new products and the things we are developing, but from a pure technology point of view, everything that we’ve done on vehicles translates directly into trucks," Straubel said at a forum in 2016.

"There’s no reason that today you can’t make a very compelling electric truck."

Musk will have some competition in the electric trucking space.

Daimler, Mercedes' parent company, first showed off its electric truck in November. Guillen actually led Daimler's semi-truck program before joining Tesla in 2012.

Daimler is currently testing the vehicle, which can drive 124 miles on a single charge, on public roads in Germany. The company said in February it was talking to 20 potential customers about its electric truck.

The Nikola Motor Company has emerged from a state of being unknown to unveiling plans for the first-ever 2000 horsepower (HP) electric class 8 semi-truck, called the Nikola One (named after Nikola Tesla).

Nikola has also revealed its hydrogen-electric semi-truck which they are claiming has a total operating range of up to 1,200 miles.

Let the competition begin.

Related: Autonomous Trucking Overlooks Skilled Labor Need


Article Topics

   All topics

BSR News & Resources

BSR study shows supply chain’s sustainable practices are key

Latest in Materials Handling

U.S-bound May imports continue to grow, reports S&P Global Market Intelligence
AGILOX North America opens new headquarters, announces new CEO
Auriemma becomes new CEO of Business Unit Software at Körber
Expo Pack México 2024 sets new records
Hai Robotics announces move of its Americas headquarters to Atlanta metro
Glencore improves recycling plant safety with ELOKON’s proximity detection system
National Forklift Safety Day: Yale Reliant operator assistance technology reaches 14 million hours of real-world run time
More Materials Handling

Subscribe to Materials Handling Magazine

Subscribe today!
Not a subscriber? Sign up today!
Subscribe today. It's FREE.
Find out what the world's most innovative companies are doing to improve productivity in their plants and distribution centers.
Start your FREE subscription today.

June 2024 Modern Materials Handling

National Forklift Safety Day comes once a year in June, but various sensor and vision-based, ‘operator-assist’ technologies, as well as telematics, are used daily to enhance the level of operator awareness for manually operated lift truck fleets.

Latest Resources

Empowering Your Workforce: Integration of Wearables and AMRs to Increase Picking Productivity
Join us on June 20 to discover how integrating wearables and AMRs can revolutionize picking productivity and operational efficiency in your warehouse and manufacturing environments.
Packaging Efficiency: The modern way to reduce freight costs
Lift Trucks & Accessories: The Trusted Workhorse Evolves
More resources

Latest Resources

2023 Automation Study: Usage & Implementation of Warehouse/DC Automation Solutions
2023 Automation Study: Usage & Implementation of Warehouse/DC Automation Solutions
This research was conducted by Peerless Research Group on behalf of Modern Materials Handling to assess usage and purchase intentions forautomation systems...
How Your Storage Practices Can Affect Your Pest Control Program
How Your Storage Practices Can Affect Your Pest Control Program
Discover how your storage practices could be affecting your pest control program and how to prevent pest infestations in your business. Join...

Warehousing Outlook 2023
Warehousing Outlook 2023
2023 is here, and so are new warehousing trends.
Extend the Life of Brownfield Warehouses
Extend the Life of Brownfield Warehouses
Today’s robotic and data-driven automation systems can minimize disruptions and improve the life and productivity of warehouse operations.
Power Supply in Overhead Cranes: Energy Chains vs. Festoons
Power Supply in Overhead Cranes: Energy Chains vs. Festoons
Download this white paper to learn more about how both systems compare.