Cars With Cords
electrified transportation is the present and the future
Friday, March 27, 2026
Net Positive Spring 2026
Thursday, March 26, 2026
A topic that we've covered many times here is Tesla's struggle to break the 2 million (2M) vehicles delivered in a calendar year. Given the growth rate that Tesla had coming into 2023, that could have been their 2M year, but vehicle growth stalled that year and has not resumed. This has left the 2M milestone just out of reach.
Below is a delivery consensus of sell-side analysts that Tesla has compiled (but does not endorse). The estimates are from: Daiwa, DB, Cowen, Canaccord, Baird, Wolfe, Exane, GS, RBC, Evercore ISI, Barclays, Mizuho, BofA, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, Truist, UBS, Jefferies, JPM, Needham & Co, HSBC, Cantor Fitzgerald, and William Blair.
This consensus shows Tesla finally breaking through the 2M milestone in 2029.
Cybercab and Semi are both coming to market soon, we'll see how much these increase the sales volume for 2027.
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Oregon's Net-Zero Switch Pays Big Dividends
Picture this: It’s 2050, you’re behind the wheel of your electric truck hauling gear up to Mt. Hood, and the only “fuel” cost is the electricity bill that’s lower than your old gas fill-ups ever were. No more watching the price at the pump spike because of some overseas drama. No more sending billions out of state to oil companies. Just clean, cheap, home-grown power and a car that greets you with good vibes.
That future isn’t a fantasy. It’s the least-cost path that Oregon has mapped out. The state’s 2025 Energy Strategy and independent modeling from the Green Energy Institute show that hitting net-zero (or darn close) by 2050 doesn’t cost extra. It saves us money. And the biggest winners are EV drivers like you and me.
Oregon’s Goals, Made for Electric Wheels
Oregon already gets a significant amount of its electricity from renewables (hello, hydro and wind). The official targets line up perfectly with what we EV folks have been cheering for:
- 45% GHG cut below 1990 levels by 2035
- 100% clean electricity by 2040
- 80%+ total reduction by 2050
This plan includes EVs, heat pumps, and efficiency upgrades. Transportation is the biggest slice of the pie, about 40% of the state’s emissions; so EVs and the grid do the heavy lifting. Good news: the modeling says we can cut overall energy demand 22% by 2050, even while the economy and population grow and electricity use doubles. Efficiency plus electrification is the cheat code. Usable energy can increase, while initial energy decreases.
The Money Math of Fossil Fuel Foolery
Here’s the headline number that still blows my mind: deep decarbonization delivers roughly $200 billion in cumulative net savings by 2050 compared to sticking with business-as-usual fossil fuels. That works out to an average $7.46 billion saved every year, ramping up to nearly $11 billion annually by 2050.
| Metric | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cumulative net savings by 2050 | $200 billion |
| Average annual savings (2025–2050) | $7.46 billion |
| Annual savings by 2050 | Nearly $11 billion |
| Upfront investment through 2028 | $12 billion |
| 2022 out-of-state fuel spending | $11 billion |
| Annual EV fuel/maintenance savings per vehicle | $1,200 |
| Cumulative GDP boost (2022–2050) | $68.5 billion |
| Net new jobs by 2050 | 12,000–18,000 |
| Public-health savings cumulative by 2050 | $6.3 to $14.1 billion |
Every EV on the road today is already banking you about $1,200 a year in fuel and maintenance savings versus its gas twin. Scale that across hundreds of thousands more vehicles, and those numbers compound fast.
Bonus round: GDP gets a $68.5 billion cumulative boost, and we add 12,000–18,000 net new jobs by 2050, mostly electricians, HVAC techs, construction crews, and battery/recycling specialists. Oregon’s data shows that EVs and renewables creates job growth and economic benefits.
Cleaner Air, Healthier Wallets, and a Resilient Grid
The benefits of this path stack. Avoided asthma attacks, fewer heart issues, and billions in public-health savings ($6.3 to $14.1 billion cumulative by 2050). Warmer homes in winter, cooler in summer, and less wildfire smoke choking our lungs because we’re not burning fossil fuels.
Energy security? Oregon imports nearly all its transportation fuel. Net-zero slashes that dependence, protects us from the next Russia-Ukraine or Middle-East price shock, and keeps more dollars circulating right here instead of padding oil-company profits.
Charging Infrastructure Is Already Accelerating
We’re not starting from zero. Oregon started building out the West Coast Electric Highway in 2010. And Oregon just locked down another $26 million in federal EV-charging funds (even while national programs are frozen). The state’s coalition with Washington and California is fighting to keep the momentum. More DC fast chargers, more workplace and apartment building charging stations, more home incentives, exactly what we need to make long-haul trips to or from Portland, Bend, Seaside, Eugene, Astoria, or Ashland. There will be infrastructure to visit Crater Lake, the Painted Hills, or any of the Seven Wonders of Oregon.
The Bottom Line: Net-Zero Isn’t a Cost, It’s an Investment That Pays You Back
The old narrative said going green would break the bank. Oregon’s own least-cost modeling just shredded that myth. Delaying action actually raises long-term costs. Moving fast on electrification and efficiency is literally the cheapest route for families, businesses, and the state budget.
So if you’ve been on the fence about that new EV or plug-in hybrid, consider this your friendly nudge from a guy who’s been driving electric in Oregon for nearly two decades. The state is building the runway. The savings are real. The jobs are coming. And the air is going to smell a whole lot sweeter.
Ready to plug in? Oregon’s net-zero future isn’t just possible. It’s already the smart money bet. Grab your keys (or rather, your charging cable), and let’s drive the Pacific Northwest straight into a cleaner, cheaper, electric tomorrow.
Ready to trade your next gas receipt for lower bills and zero tailpipe guilt? Drop your thoughts in the comments. I’ll see you out there, topping up at the charging oasis.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
How Data Centers Can Upgrade Your Home to get the Energy They Need
Powering the Future: Household Negawatts for Data Center Demands
Introduction
As data centers proliferate across the US to support artificial intelligence and cloud computing, their energy appetite is surging. Projections indicate that these facilities could add up to 93 gigawatts of demand to the grid by 2029, contributing significantly to an overall electricity growth of 128 gigawatts over the next five years. This expansion raises questions about how to meet the need without massive new power plants. One intriguing solution lies in household "negawatts," the energy saved through efficiency measures that effectively supplies the grid by reducing consumption elsewhere. By incentivizing home upgrades, we might offset much of this demand in a practical, distributed way that benefits everyone involved.
The Concept of Negawatts
Negawatt is a term coined by Amory Lovins of RMI to describe conserved energy as a resource. It represents avoided usage that frees up capacity on existing infrastructure. In essence, if households reduce their draw on the grid, the saved power becomes available for high-demand users, such as data centers. Studies suggest this approach holds real promise. For instance, upgrading inefficient electric heating, cooling, and water systems in just 21 million US homes to more efficient alternatives could unlock 30 gigawatts of capacity, covering about 33% of the anticipated data center surge. When combined with other home-based strategies like rooftop solar and battery storage, the potential climbs even higher, potentially exceeding the full 93 gigawatts needed. This is not mere theory; in states like Texas, such upgrades could yield 13.9 gigawatts, offsetting 80% of local data center projections.
Hyperscalers Funding Household Upgrades
Hyperscalers, the large tech firms behind these data centers, could play a pivotal role by funding household improvements. Rather than waiting years for new generation facilities, they might invest directly in homes to create immediate capacity. One proposed model has hyperscalers covering 50% of upfront costs for heat pump installations, at a rate of $344 per kilowatt-year, which compares favorably to the $315 per kilowatt-year for a new natural gas plant. For solar and storage, a 30% subsidy from these companies, paired with streamlined processes to cut costs by 40%, could deliver power at $365 per kilowatt-year. Households would handle the remaining investment, around $9,000 for heat pumps or $11,000 for solar setups, but recoup it through lower bills. This setup avoids the need for extensive new builds, speeds deployment to months instead of years, and enhances grid resilience against outages.
Managing Implementation and Enhancing Public Relations
To bring these ideas to fruition, effective management is essential. Hyperscalers could partner directly with utilities to design and administer incentive programs, leveraging the utilities' established expertise in demand-side management and customer outreach. For example, companies like Google have already collaborated with utilities such as Indiana Michigan Power and the Tennessee Valley Authority to implement measures that stabilize the grid while supporting energy efficiency initiatives. In this model, hyperscalers might provide funding for rebates on heat pumps or insulation, and utilities would handle enrollment, verification, and distribution, ensuring seamless integration with existing billing systems and regulatory frameworks.
Alternatively, hyperscalers could channel funds through independent organizations that specialize in efficiency programs, such as the Energy Trust of Oregon. This nonprofit, funded by utility ratepayers and focused on reducing energy use, offers cash incentives for upgrades like heat pumps, water heaters, insulation, windows, and smart thermostats, helping homeowners save on bills while freeing up grid capacity. By contributing to such entities, hyperscalers could scale efforts across regions without building new administrative structures, drawing on proven models that have delivered measurable savings.
Beyond logistics, this approach yields substantial public relations advantages. Today, data center projects often face community opposition because they can drive up residential electricity bills, as utilities pass on the costs of new infrastructure to all ratepayers. In places like California and Ohio, residents have resisted expansions due to fears of rate hikes and environmental strain. However, by funding household efficiency upgrades, hyperscalers flip the script: data centers become partners in lowering bills, potentially reducing opposition and fostering goodwill. This narrative shift positions tech firms as community benefactors, smoothing the path for future developments while delivering tangible savings to families.
Pathways to Household Energy Efficiency
Households have numerous paths to boost efficiency and generate negawatts. Replacing electric resistance heating with heat pumps stands out, as it can slash heating electricity use by 50% to 75%. Similarly, switching to heat pump water heaters might save $200 to $550 annually per family, thanks to their ability to use up to 70% less energy than standard electric models. Adding insulation to attics, walls, and floors often reduces total home energy costs by 11% to 15%, with even greater impacts on heating and cooling bills. Upgrading doors and windows to energy-efficient versions can trim heating and cooling expenses by 7% to 33%, depending on the type and existing setup. Beyond these, options abound: installing LED lighting cuts bulb energy by 75% to 90%, smart thermostats optimize usage for 10% to 15% savings, and energy-efficient appliances like refrigerators or washers reduce consumption by 20% to 60% per unit. Sealing air leaks, adding weatherstripping, and using programmable devices further compound gains, potentially lowering overall household bills by 30% when combined.
| Efficiency Measure | Typical Annual Savings | Estimated % Reduction in Relevant Energy Use |
|---|---|---|
| Heat pumps for heating | $370 to $740 per household | 50% to 75% on heating electricity |
| Heat pump water heaters | $200 to $550 per household | Up to 70% on water heating |
| Adding insulation | 11% to 15% on total bills | 15% on heating and cooling |
| Upgraded doors and windows | $125 to $465 per year | 7% to 33% on heating and cooling |
| LED lighting and efficient appliances | Varies, up to $400 waste avoided | 20% to 90% per appliance or light |
Conclusion
In summary, household negawatts offer a viable way to address data center energy demands without over-relying on new generation. By partnering with hyperscalers to fund upgrades, we can unlock gigawatts of capacity quickly, cut costs for families, and build a more reliable grid. People might even welcome data centers in their regions if it means lower electricity bills rather than higher ones, transforming potential adversaries into supportive communities. This collaborative model not only meets immediate needs but also fosters long-term efficiency, proving that smart investments in homes can power our digital future effectively.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Volatility Is Inherent To Petroleum
Oil Shockwave De Jure: From 1970s Embargo to Hormuz Havoc
Prices at the pump are painful again. Gas car drivers are wincing, fleets are recalculating routes, and boardrooms are dusting off contingency plans. Sound familiar? It should, because we have danced this disruptive dance before. The 1970s oil shocks made gasoline as precious as gold and kick-started the first serious push toward fuel efficiency and renewable energy. Fast-forward half a century, and the Iran war, complete with naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz, has slammed the brakes on roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil and liquefied natural gas. Prices are spiking, volatility is par for the course. At CarsWithCords.net we cannot help but ask: will this modern mess deliver the same electric wake-up call?
Back to the Bad Old Days: The 1970s Petroleum Panic That Changed Everything
The Yom Kippur War of 1973 resulted in an OPEC embargo. Oil prices quadrupled from about three dollars to twelve dollars a barrel almost overnight. Lines at gas stations snaked for blocks, odd-even rationing was invoked, and Americans suddenly cared deeply about miles per gallon. Then came 1979, the Iranian Revolution, and prices doubled again. The result was not just sticker shock, it was legislation with teeth. Congress passed the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards in 1975, forcing automakers to nearly double passenger-car efficiency by the mid-1980s. Japanese imports with their thrifty four-cylinder engines flooded the US market, Detroit scrambled to downsize, and the phrase “gas guzzler” entered the national lexicon.
These energy shocks also lit a fire under renewables. The Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 opened the grid to non-utility generators, solar research budgets ballooned, 32 solar water-heating panels (solar thermal panels) were placed on the roof of the West Wing, and wind farms began sprouting in California. Efficiency became patriotic, alternatives became viable, and the seeds of today’s electrification movement were planted in the panic of those pump-line days.
Current Chaos in the Chokepoint: Mines, Missiles, and a Maritime Mess
Jump to today in early 2026. Joint U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran escalated into open conflict, and Tehran responded with the queen's gambit energy chess move: naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz. Tanker traffic has plummeted, insurers have bailed, and shipping companies are anchoring offshore rather than risking fire or worse. The narrow waterway normally carries about 20% of global oil and a hefty share of LNG. With traffic down sharply, that flow has been throttled. Crude has surged past the $100-per-barrel mark, briefly flirting with $120 before settling into volatile territory. Gasoline prices are climbing fast, European natural-gas futures have spiked, and analysts warn of ripple effects on plastics, fertilizers, and everything in between.
This is chokepoint chaos. Unlike the coordinated OPEC embargoes of old, this disruption is live, kinetic, and laced with uncertainty. Mines can be cleared, but the psychological premium on every barrel lingers. Volatility is the name of the game, and markets hate nothing more than not knowing when the next tanker will safely transit.
Parallels and Progress: Same Shock, Sharper Tools
Both crises trace back to the same volatile region, both choke global supply, and both punish consumers at the pump and any goods that are transported (e.g., nearly everything). Yet the differences matter. In the 1970s the world had almost no electric vehicles, no serious battery supply chain, and climate change was barely on the radar. Today we have viable EVs rolling off assembly lines, falling battery costs, and (some) governments committed to decarbonization targets. High gasoline prices that once merely boosted hybrid sales now make the total-cost-of-ownership math for full battery-electric vehicles look downright delicious.
Natural-gas volatility adds a fresh twist. Power plants that rely on LNG face higher costs, which could accelerate the shift to wind and solar. The 1970s gave us CAFE standards and PURPA. What might 2026 deliver? The current US administration is unlikely to do anything to promote EVs or renewables, but individuals can choose to plug in rather than fill up.
The Silver Lining: A Jolt for Efficiency, Electrification, and Energy Independence
Every cloud has a corded lining. When fuel prices swing wildly, consumers vote with their wallets. Expect EV inquiry rates to climb as payback periods shrink. Fleet operators already eyeing electrification will accelerate those plans. The 1970s shocks proved that sustained high prices can reshape entire industries. This time the industry is ready, the technology is mature, and the environmental imperative is crystal clear.
So while the mines in the Strait of Hormuz create genuine hardship and the price spikes sting, this crisis also spotlights the fragility of our fossil-fuel reliance. The same forces that once pushed Detroit to slim down sedans and California to pioneer wind power are at work again, only now the finish line is a world where most miles are driven on electrons instead of octane.
History does not repeat exactly, it rhymes. The 1970s gave us the first efficiency revolution. The Hormuz havoc of 2026 could turbocharge the electrification one. The next chapter in energy independence is charging up right now.
| Era / Year | Trigger / Event | Gasoline Price Impact (Nominal US Avg Peak or Surge) | Key Policy / Tech / Market Response |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1973-1974 | Arab Oil Embargo (OPEC, Yom Kippur War) | Doubled from ~$0.36 to $0.50-$0.65; long lines, rationing | CAFE standards introduced, early renewables push, efficiency focus |
| 1979-1981 | Iranian Revolution + Iran-Iraq War | From ~$0.63 (1979) to peak ~$1.31 (1981) | Further conservation, PURPA, renewables investment surge |
| 1990-1991 | Gulf War (Iraq invades Kuwait) | From ~$1.00 to over $1.50 briefly | Saudi production increase, prices moderated post-intervention |
| 2005 | Hurricanes Katrina & Rita (Gulf refinery damage) | Jump to ~$3.00-$3.20 regionally/nationally | Short-term shortages, post-hurricane recovery focus |
| 2007-2008 | Global demand surge + speculation | Peak ~$4.11 (July 2008) | Financial crisis crash followed, hybrid/EV interest rise |
| 2011-2014 | Arab Spring, Libya conflict, Iran sanctions | Averages ~$3.50-$3.70, peaks ~$3.64 (2012) | Shale boom begins easing long-term pressures |
| 2022 | Russia-Ukraine Invasion + sanctions | Over $5 in regions, national highs ~$4.17-$5.00+ | Accelerated EV adoption, renewables incentives |
| 2026 (Current) | Iran war, Strait of Hormuz mines/blockage | Surged past $100 crude, gasoline climbing rapidly (volatile highs) | Accelerated EV and renewables adoption |
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Electrifying Freight: How Wright's Law Drives the Shift to Electric Trucking
Electrifying the Heavy Haul: The Business Case for eTrucks in Europe and Beyond
Heavy trucks in Europe account for over 25% of road greenhouse gas emissions, a share that continues to rise as economies expand and freight volumes increase. Battery electric heavy trucks, or eTrucks, offer a path to near-zero emissions when powered by renewables. Wright's Law, the principle that technologies improve with every doubling of cumulative production, makes this transition not only feasible but economically compelling. In Europe, detailed modeling shows eTrucks achieving cost parity with diesel by the early 2030s. Fleet managers, focused on bottom lines, will adopt them for the savings on fuel and maintenance. That shift will also clean the air, a welcome side benefit. While Europe provides the case study here, the underlying economics apply globally, from US interstates to Asian highways.
Wright's Law has proven reliable across clean energy tech, from solar panels to electric passenger vehicles. Researchers at Eindhoven University of Technology extended it to eTrucks, modeling the full system including batteries, drivetrains, and infrastructure.[1] They drew on historical data, where batteries drop 28% in cost per production doubling, a pattern with an R² of 0.99. Global battery output grows 60% annually, accelerating the curve. The model optimizes European fleets: 23% for 250 km routes, 41% for 500 km, 35% for 750 km, and 2% for specialized needs. eTrucks use just 40% of diesel's energy per ton-km, a gain that offsets higher upfront costs through lower electricity prices.
Generational advances build momentum. First-generation eTrucks replace diesel components with electric equivalents. Integrated e-axles trim weight in the second generation, while structural batteries in the third could cut up to 1,000 kg. EU rules on zero-emission vehicles will soon allow two extra tons for batteries, boosting payloads. By 2029, eTrucks could haul more than diesel models on cleaner power. The financials drive adoption. A 750 km eTruck costs $430,000 upfront, compared to $140,000 for diesel. Yet, electricity expenses run 45% lower per ton-km, and maintenance avoids engine overhauls. Total cost of ownership reaches parity by 2030 for long hauls, with fast-charging networks in place. Batteries may fall to $27 per kWh by 2050, making eTrucks far cheaper overall.
The table below summarizes key parameters from the Eindhoven model. It illustrates how Wright's Law erodes barriers over time.
| Parameter | Baseline (2022) | Projection (2030) | Projection (2050) | Learning Rate/Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Battery Cost ($/kWh) | $150 | $91 | $27 | 28% reduction per production doubling |
| Gravimetric Density (Wh/kg) | ~250 | ~350 | ~500 | +7.36 Wh/kg per year (R² 0.96) |
| Drivetrain Cost Advantage | -$10,000 | -$5,000 | +$30,000 | Weight/efficiency gains over diesel |
| CO₂ Intensity (g/kWh, EU Mix) | 200 | 112 | 11 | Improved efficiency and lower emission grid |
| TCO per Ton-km (vs. Diesel) | +20% | Parity | -50% | OPEX savings from 40% energy use |
These projections beat conservative expert estimates, which forecast $100 per kWh batteries in 2050.[1] Emissions drop sharply as Europe's grid cleans up to 11 g CO₂ per kWh by mid-century. Lifecycle analyses already favor eTrucks over diesel, a gap that widens with scale. Policies amplify the economics: incentives for 500+ km ranges, vehicle-to-grid revenue streams, and standardized fast-charging grids. Fleet managers respond to these signals, optimizing routes for overnight charging on shorter legs.
Europe's coordinated approach, with EU-wide mandates and zones, creates the scale that benefits everyone. Spillover effects from electric car production lower costs worldwide. In the US, where trucks consume 70% of road fuel, the same Wright's Law dynamics hold; global supply chains ensure affordable batteries reach all markets. Challenges persist, such as mineral price fluctuations and charger rollouts. Yet, data shows learning outpaces obstacles. eTrucks deliver returns that diesel cannot match long-term.
Fleet managers prioritize what makes financial sense for their operations: lower TCO, reliable uptime, and scalable fleets. Electrification checks those boxes, and the emissions reductions follow naturally. Europe demonstrates the playbook, but the logic travels. Policymakers elsewhere should support infrastructure and standards to unlock the gains. The trucking sector stands ready to electrify, driven by dollars and sense.
Reference:
[1] Hoekstra, A., & Alkemade, F. (2025). Using learning curves to guide the energy transition with the example of heavy electric trucks. npj Sustainable Mobility and Transport, 1, 29. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44333-025-00029-5
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Electrifying Your Home: Simple Steps to Cut Household Emissions
Households in the US account for about 40% of the nation's carbon emissions. This share covers home energy for heating, appliances, and electricity, plus personal transportation through cars and flights. The nation's 40 million acres of lawns add a hidden burden: gas-powered maintenance equipment. These two-stroke noise machines emit around 30 million tons of CO2 annually.
The good news is that simple, targeted changes can cut that share dramatically while saving money and improving daily life. RewiringAmerica.org shows how electrification changes fossil fuel habits into efficient, all-electric routines. Their Household Savings Report shows that the average family could pocket $1,050 to $2,585 yearly from such changes. With tools like their Bill Impacts Calculator, homeowners now get zip code-specific guidance on state and local incentives and rebates. In the sections below, we break down the top decisions, drawing on Rewiring's data for real-world impact. Note that now, in early 2026, many federal incentives for clean energy upgrades are gone, but many state and utility programs are trying to pick up the slack.
Electrifying Transportation
Personal travel tops the list of household emitters, often claiming 25% or more of a family's total output. Gas vehicles alone spew an average of 4.6 metric tons of CO2 yearly per car, not counting manufacturing or flights that add another 1.6 metric tons per transatlantic roundtrip. The fix starts with going electric. An electric vehicle (EV) slashes lifetime emissions by up to 70%, especially as US grids add more renewables. Rewiring America highlights that home-charged EVs align perfectly with solar setups, turning drives into near-zero emission rides. For shorter trips, blend in biking or public transit to drop transport emissions by half.
Owners then save $1,000 or more annually on fuel and upkeep. For long-distance trips, choose rail (if it's an option); this cuts emissions by 90% over planes. Rewiring's campaign urges action on lasting benefits like these, offering free online tools to map your switch.
Upgrading Home Heating
Heating ranks as the biggest home energy hog, with gas furnaces emitting 2-3 metric tons of CO2 per year in chilly regions. Heat pumps offer a smarter path. These electric wonders extract warmth from outside air, even below freezing, and run three times more efficiently than gas systems. Rewiring America estimates a 40-70% emissions drop, alongside $600 in yearly energy savings for many households. Plus, it's a great air conditioner during the hot months.
Insulation sets the stage. Add attic barriers or seal drafts to trim heating demands by 20-30%. This combo not only warms homes quietly but also builds resilience against outages.
Efficient Water Heating
Water heating quietly claims 15-20% of home energy, with gas units adding 0.9 metric tons of CO2 annually. Heat pump water heaters flip that by using ambient air to warm supply, cutting energy use by 60%. They repay quickly via $400 in savings. Rewiring America bundles these into full-home plans, where they pair seamlessly with solar for emission-free showers.
Electric Cooking
In the kitchen, gas stoves can leak methane and contribute 0.2 metric tons of CO2 per household. Induction cooktops heat pots directly with electricity, using 40% less energy and zero direct emissions. Rewiring's resources spotlight induction as a quick win, especially for low-income families through state electrification programs.
Sustainable Landscaping
Lawns cover 40 million acres nationwide, demanding weekly upkeep that rivals farming in its toll. For the average household with a yard, gas mowers and trimmers emit about 0.3 metric tons of CO2 yearly, part of the national total of 30 million tons from such tools. Electrifying yard care equipment changes that. Battery-powered mowers and blowers cut emissions by 50-80% compared to gas models, produce zero tailpipe pollution, and run quieter, sparing neighbors and your ears. Rewiring America notes these tools align with home solar, making upkeep nearly carbon-free.
Even better, remove the lawn altogether through xeriscaping, a low-water approach that replaces turf with drought-tolerant designs. This can result in beautiful, colorful yards bursting with local plants that need little-to-no water and fertilizer, while slashing chemical use and maintenance costs. Native species draw pollinators, enhance biodiversity, and thrive in your climate without the hassle of constant watering or feeding. Swap turf for native plants or meadows to eliminate mowing emissions entirely, while saving up to 10,000 gallons of water per year and boosting local biodiversity. These landscapes sequester carbon as sinks. You can start small with a no-mow zone; the result is a yard that works with nature, not against it.
Efficiency Boosts and Renewables
Layer on broad efficiencies for extra gains. Swap to LED bulbs and Energy Star appliances, and you shave 10-20% off electricity bills, or 0.3-0.5 metric tons of CO2. Programmable thermostats automate the rest, avoiding waste without thought.
Renewables seal the deal. Rooftop solar offsets 70-100% of home power, erasing 1-2 metric tons of CO2 while earning credits through net metering in many states. Rewiring's updated post-2025 guides highlight rebates now available in states like California and New York, focusing on local incentives to keep adoption strong.
| Upgrade | Annual Cost Savings* (USD) | Emissions Reduction (Metric Tons CO2) |
|---|---|---|
| Electric Vehicle | $1,000+ | Up to 4.6 |
| Heat Pump (Heating) | $600 | 0.8-2.1 |
| Heat Pump Water Heater | $400 | 0.9 |
| Induction Cooktop | $50-100 | 0.2 |
| Electric Lawn Tools | $60-120 | 0.3 |
| Solar Panels | $1200 | 1-2 |
*These figures vary by location and other factors, but they show clear wins.
Wrapping It Up
Everyday choices can add up. Households wield real influence over emissions through these electrified choices. A full suite might halve your footprint and save $2,000 yearly, per Rewiring America's models. With federal incentives phased out, some state and utility options have stepped up, making planning straightforward via Rewiring's calculator. Begin with an energy audit or an EV joyride. Each step not only lightens the planetary load but also sharpens home comfort and finances. The momentum builds; your household can lead the charge toward a more efficient tomorrow.
References:
- Household emissions statistic from EPA data.
- Lawn acreage from USDA reports.
- National lawn emissions from EPA estimates.
- Electric tool reductions from Consumer Reports.
- Xeriscaping definition from WaterSense.
- Benefits of low-water yards from Xeriscape Council.
- Colorful native plant examples from local extension services.
- Biodiversity gains from Audubon Society.
Sunday, March 8, 2026
Tesla’s Path to 10 Million Active FSD Subscriptions: Progress, Challenges, and Strategies
Picture this: your car zipping through traffic like it's got its own personal professional chauffeur, except the chauffeur is an AI that's never had a coffee break, never texts while driving, and never gets road rage. That's Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) dream in action, quietly chipping away at the planet's carbon footprint one autonomous, emission-free mile at a time. But actually getting to 10 million active FSD subscriptions? That's like trying to parallel-park a Cybertruck in downtown San Francisco during rush hour: ambitious, occasionally chaotic, and guaranteed to turn heads.
Tesla's push for widespread FSD adoption sits at the heart of its vision for sustainable mobility. Autonomous driving can optimize routes, reduce idling, and cut unnecessary trips, all while promoting efficient electric vehicle use over fossil-fuel alternatives. Yet the company faces real engineering, financial, and market hurdles on the road to this 10M milestone. Let's explore Tesla's path to 10 million active FSD subscriptions, tied to Elon Musk's high-stakes compensation package, current adoption realities, structural challenges, and potential breakthroughs like licensing.
Musk's Trillion-Dollar Carrot: The 2025 CEO Performance Award
Shareholders approved Elon Musk's 2025 CEO Performance Award in November 2025 with strong support. The package grants Musk the chance to earn up to roughly 423 million additional Tesla shares, potentially worth hundreds of billions of dollars (or even approaching $1 trillion in optimistic scenarios) if Tesla hits aggressive targets over a decade. Musk receives no base salary; everything hinges on performance.
The pay package is divided into 12 tranches. Many of the tranches are market capitalization milestones (starting at $2 trillion and climbing to $8.5 trillion). The other goals include cumulative vehicle deliveries of 20 million, 10 million active FSD subscriptions, 1 million Optimus bots delivered, 1 million robotaxis in operation, and escalating adjusted EBITDA thresholds.
The 10 million active FSD subscriptions goal ranks second on the list of operational milestones, right after 20 million vehicles delivered. Although the goals can be achieved in any order. Specifically, the tranche requires Tesla to achieve 10 million active FSD subscriptions as measured by daily active over a consecutive three-month period.
Where FSD Stands Today: Steady Growth, Low Penetration
As of the end of 2025, Tesla reported 1.1 million active FSD users globally. This figure marks a 38% jump from 800,000 in 2024, continuing an upward trend (see table below). Yet only about 30% represent true monthly subscriptions; the rest stem from one-time FSD purchases, which do not count toward the tranche.
FSD adoption hovers around 12% of Tesla's cumulative fleet (roughly 8.9 million vehicles delivered as of late 2025). The $99 monthly price for supervised FSD helps, but take rates remain modest due to price sensitivity, regulatory scrutiny, and prices will certainly change once Unsupervised FSD is available.
Here's a quick snapshot of the trajectory:
| Year | Active FSD Users Reported |
FSD Subscriptions | Year-over-Year Growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 400,000 | 20,000 | base |
| 2022 | 500,000 | 50,000 | 25% |
| 2023 | 600,000 | 90,000 | 20% |
| 2024 | 800,000 | 160,000 | 33% |
| 2025 | 1,100,000 | 330,000 | 38% |
This growth shows promise, especially as Tesla shifted to subscription-only in early 2026 (ending one-time purchases after February 14, 2026).
Roadblocks Ahead: Deliveries, Robotaxis, and the Numbers Game
Hitting 10 million subscriptions without explosive vehicle growth looks tough. Tesla delivered about 1.64 million vehicles in 2025, a roughly 8.6% decline from 2024, marking two straight years of contraction. Projections for 2026 hover conservatively around 1.8 million (some optimistic models push toward 2 million), still far from the sustained annual growth pace needed to scale the subscriber base rapidly.
With no immediate affordable model launch, a surge in private vehicle sales is unlikely. Meaning the pool of potential FSD adopters (assuming 10-20% take rate) grows slowly.
Adding irony, another milestone (1 million robotaxis in commercial operation) could work against the FSD subscriptions goal. Tesla-owned fleet vehicles in Robotaxi service do not count toward the 10 million FSD subscriptions goal, as it requires external paid access. If Cybercab succeeds wildly, shared autonomy might reduce demand for personal ownership, shrinking the addressable market for individual subscriptions even as it delivers huge environmental wins through higher vehicle utilization and more electric cars on roads.
Simple math highlights the squeeze: at 1.8-2 million annual deliveries and 15% FSD adoption, new subscribers might add 270,000-300,000 yearly. If adoption rates and/or vehicle production don't increase, reaching 10 million from today's 330 thousand would take decades at that clip, especially if robotaxi fleets pull buyers away.
Licensing: The Potential Game-Changer
If 10 million from Tesla direct FSD subscriptions is nearly impossible within the decade of the pay package timeline, licensing offers a chance to boost the numbers. Unlike internal fleet units, FSD licenses to other automakers count toward the 10 million milestone. Partnerships with legacy players could put Tesla FSD-enabled vehicles from non-Tesla brands on the road. Tesla would collect a royalty on each subscription and provide FSD updates. Imagine Ford, GM, or Toyota fleets running Tesla's navigation and autonomy stack.
The problem with this is that Tesla only has a decade to get to 10 million subscribers and the legacy automakers do not move quickly.
Cybercab Fleet Backdoor
Another option (and maybe the most likely) is that Tesla will sell Cybercabs to 3rd party fleet managers to enroll in the Tesla Robotaxi network. The fleet managers will be the vehicle owners, and if you own a Cybercab, you must pay for an FSD subscription, or it's nearly worthless. The fleet managers will tend to their flock of Cybercabs, cleaning them between trips and putting them in the charging barn during their off shifts.
As we discussed here, Tesla could eventually sell 15 million Cybercabs per year. That would certainly get Musk to his tranche goal even if personal vehicle sales and FSD adoption stay flat and legacy automakers are slow or absent on the FSD uptake.
When Might We Hit 10 Million? A Grounded Guess
Realistically, if personal vehicle deliveries ramp modestly to 3 million annually by late this decade and adoption upticks to 50% as the FSD tech improves and more regions are included, direct FSD subscriptions could get to 5 million FSD subscriptions by 2035, leaving a 5 million gap.
An affordable vehicle release could greatly boost personal vehicle ownership. Tesla could use this method, but Musk has been laser-focused on autonomy, so (as much as I and many others would love a more affordable Tesla) this is unlikely.
Licensing could kick in by 2035, but Tesla cannot depend on others to adopt their technology. They prefer to own their own destiny. So, while licensing may occur, it is not the path that Musk will depend on. He has even said that he doesn't worry about legacy automakers stealing their ideas because they cannot get them to take the ideas when they are served up on a golden platter.
This leaves 3rd party Robotaxi fleets to cover the remaining 5 million vehicles. Tesla's Robotaxi service has been slow to expand, but it will likely be ubiquitous by 2035.
Conclusion: Charging Toward Cleaner Mobility
In the end, Tesla's quest for 10 million active FSD subscriptions blends bold ambition with stubborn practicalities. The path to FSD has been slow; innovation, technological progress, or disruptive change often feels painfully slow and incremental for a long time, then accelerates dramatically all at once. An overnight success, decades in the making, as the saying goes.
Whether through direct subscribers, licenses, or cyber fleets, hitting this milestone would mark a meaningful step toward a world with fewer auto crashes and fewer related deaths. Let's keep rooting for the tech to deliver.
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Tesla: More Than Meets the Eye
You know Tesla as the electric car powerhouse. Think again. This company channels the word "transformer" in ways that would make Nikola Tesla nod in approval. It builds actual electrical transformers, deploys AI transformer models, and reshapes entire industries. All this happens with a wink toward sustainability. Tesla's innovations cut emissions by promoting renewables and efficiency. They show technology can tackle real-world challenges. Yet, progress demands patience amid engineering hurdles and market realities. Let's explore how Tesla transforms, one volt and one parameter block at a time.
Nikola's Legacy Lights the Way
Nikola Tesla pioneered alternating current systems, including transformers that step up or down voltage for efficient power transmission. His work laid the foundation for modern electricity. The company is named after this inventor for good reasons. Today, Tesla honors that heritage by advancing energy tech. They focus on batteries, solar panels, and grid solutions. These efforts help integrate renewables into everyday life. Imagine Nikola seeing his ideas power homes without coal plants.
Tesla now manufactures its own electrical transformers. Transformers are key for voltage conversion in large-scale energy projects. Tesla's versions integrate with Megapack systems. The Megapack 3, set for production in late 2026, boosts storage to 5 megawatt-hours per unit. Four of these form a Megablock, complete with a built-in transformer. This setup simplifies installation and scales up renewable deployments. Costs remain grounded. A Megapack system might run around $1.5 million, depending on specs. Yet, savings accrue through longevity and efficiency. Tesla's vertical integration cuts wait times from years to months. It supports broader adoption of solar and wind. Society evolves slowly, but these steps foster cleaner energy habits.
AI Alchemy: Neural Transformers at Work
Shift gears to artificial intelligence. Tesla employs transformer neural networks, the backbone of modern AI. These models use attention mechanisms to process data sequences. In Full Self-Driving software, they analyze camera feeds and predict road behaviors. FSD version 12 relies on end-to-end neural nets for steering and braking. Transformers handle spatial and temporal data with flair. They fuse inputs from multiple cameras into a coherent view. This tech demands massive training. Tesla's systems churn through 70,000 GPU hours per build. Optimus, the humanoid robot, uses similar architectures. It learns tasks from video, much like FSD learns driving. Transformers enable fluid motion and object manipulation. Engineering realities temper hype. Hardware limits and safety testing slow rollout. Still, the potential excites. Efficient autonomy reduces vehicle emissions through optimized routes and shared rides.
To sum up Tesla's transformer facets, check this table:
| Definition Type | Description | Environmental Impact | Humorous Quip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Historical (Nikola's Legacy) | Honoring AC power innovations | Enables efficient renewable grids | From mad scientist to eco-innovator, thanks Nikola! |
| Literal (Electrical Devices) | Manufacturing transformers for Megapacks | Scales solar and wind, cuts fossil dependency | Stepping up voltage without stepping on the planet. |
| AI/Tech (Neural Architecture) | Powering FSD and Optimus with attention models | Boosts efficiency, lowers transport emissions | AI that drives smoother than your morning coffee rush. |
| Metaphorical (Industry Disruption) | Revolutionizing auto, energy, AI sectors | Accelerates shift to sustainable practices | Turning oil barons' frowns upside down. |
This alliteration-rich array shows Tesla's multifaceted magic.
Industry Overhaul Odyssey
Tesla disrupts beyond hardware and code. In autos, electric vehicles replace gas guzzlers. Models like the Cybertruck push boundaries with bold designs. Energy storage stabilizes grids, making renewables reliable. AI extends to robotics, promising labor efficiencies. Financially, Tesla balances ambition with reality. Quarterly revenues hit billions. They collaborate with utilities and governments for broader impact. Picture oil execs scratching their heads as EVs zoom past.
Charging into a Brighter Future
Tesla embodies transformation across definitions. From Nikola's sparks to neural nets and bots, they innovate with purpose. Their biggest challenge is to transform our world to a future free from fossil fuels.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Trump's EV Policies Are Killing Jobs in Red States
Red State Rhythms and Rolling Risks
The Battery Belt is a real geographic area that stretches across the American South and the heart of the Midwest. Companies have poured over $200 billion into US manufacturing for electric transport. Most of this capital landed in Republican districts. Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky are the new hubs for battery cells and assembly lines. These states backed Donald Trump in the 2024 election. Yet, his administration is targeting the very incentives that made these massive factories possible. It is a bold move; it is also quite confusing for the local economies. These investments were projected to create about 230,000 new manufacturing jobs across the country. A staggering 77% of those jobs are located in Republican districts.
If the federal government pulls the plug on funding, these communities will feel the shock first. It is not just about the environment; it is about the local paycheck. In Georgia, the Hyundai Motor Group made a $12.6 billion investment (including joint-venture battery production) in a 2,960-acre facility in Bryan County to manufacture up to 500,000 EVs annually for Hyundai, Kia, and Genesis. The state leadership wanted to be the electric mobility capital of the nation. Now, they are facing a federal policy that acts like a cold bucket of water. It is a fundamental shift that puts billions of dollars in stranded capital at risk. Automakers like Ford and GM are already taking massive write-downs. Ford recently took a $12.5 billion charge as it pulled back on electric plans. This is a painful pivot for states that banked on a high-tech future.
Beijing's Big Battery Bet
While the US is busy arguing about subsidies, China is busy building electric cars. They are not slowing down; they are accelerating into the distance. China wants to be the primary automaker for the 21st century. They have already locked down the entire supply chain. They control lithium; they control cobalt. They have companies like BYD that are churning out affordable, high-quality models. This is not a hypothetical scenario. China is positioning itself to dominate every global road. They see electric power as the future of personal transportation. They are not waiting for a political consensus to form. They are winning the race through sheer volume and vertical integration.
China’s strategy is long-term and unwavering. They do not have the same political ping-pong that we see in the US. When they decide to build a battery industry, they build it. Today, they are the world's largest exporter of vehicles. If we cede this ground, we are not just losing a technology; we're losing the most significant manufacturing competition of this century.
| Feature | Internal Combustion (ICE) | Electric Vehicle (EV) |
|---|---|---|
| Total Moving Parts | Over 2,000 | Roughly 20 |
| Fuel Cost per Mile | $0.12 to $0.17 | Approximately $0.05 |
| Maintenance Needs | Oil, Belts, and Mufflers | Mostly Tires and Wipers |
| US Job Growth | Traditional Midwest | Southern Battery Belt |
| Driving Experience | Vibrations, Noise, and Pollution | Instant Torque and Silence |
Fading Fords and Foreign Frontiers
If the US stops innovating, our export options will shrivel. Other countries are moving toward strict mandates. Europe is setting firm deadlines for the end of gas engines. China is already leading the way. If Detroit only builds gas-guzzlers, they will have nobody to sell them to outside of our own borders. Our cars will become a niche product for a shrinking market. It is a dangerous game to play with our industrial heritage. Global markets want efficiency; they want the latest technology.
Ignoring this trend is like trying to sell landlines in the age of the smartphone. It might work for a few enthusiasts, but it won't sustain a national economy. US automakers risk becoming irrelevant on the world stage. They need to compete in London, Tokyo, and Berlin. If they cannot provide what those consumers want, they will lose their footprint. We are seeing a vacuum form in the global market. Chinese brands are more than happy to fill that space. We are essentially handing over our lunch money to our biggest competitors.
The 2035 Math Marathon
By the year 2035, the math is completely obvious for the average driver. Electric cars will be cheaper to buy, fuel, and maintain than gas cars. The technology for batteries is improving with every passing month. Range anxiety will be a ghost of the past. Performance is already superior in almost every metric. Electric motors provide instant torque. They are faster off the line. They are smoother on the highway. You do not need to visit a greasy gas station. You just plug in at home and charge up while you sleep.
The maintenance is a dream for any owner. There are no mufflers to rust, no timing belts to snap, no spark plugs, or fuel filters. There are no oil changes to schedule. An electric motor is a simple, elegant machine. It has about 20 moving parts. A gas engine has over 2,000 parts that can fail. The total cost of ownership is simply lower. By 2035, buying a gas car will feel like buying a horse and buggy in 1960. It might be nostalgic, but it won't be practical.
A Polished Plug-In Path
The future is electric; it is a fact of physics and market reality. Policy can delay the transition, but it cannot stop the global momentum. We can choose to lead this revolution, or we can choose to follow it. Leading creates high-paying jobs in the heart of the US. Following means buying our future from overseas companies. We should embrace this change. We should support the workers in the Battery Belt who are building the next generation of transport. They are the ones who are forging the path forward. It is time to stop the political bickering and start the engines (er, motors). We must look toward a future free from fossil fuels. It is the only way to ensure our economy remains as vibrant as the cars we drive. The road is open; the light is green; it is time to charge ahead.




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