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The Staggering Economics of the Tesla Semi

The economics of the Tesla semi show that it is about 83% cheaper to drive and haul goods than a standard diesel truck. Not to mention the reduction in cost due to less maintenance. The Tesla semi will truly disrupt the trucking industry.

The Staggering Economics of the Tesla Semi

The Tesla Semi is going to start deliveries this year and there is some staggering economics of how much better it will be than a diesel truck.

Elon Musk has stated that the Tesla semi will start shipping this year and that it will have 500 miles of range. This is after many delays, but Tesla is finally ready to start delivering it to customers. In Elon's Master Plan, Part 2, he made reference to building an electric semi.

The first customer of the Tesla semi is not known to the public yet. Some think it will be PepsiCo because they placed an order for 100 electric semi trucks. Tesla will build out Mega Chargers for the Tesla semi in order to make sure it can charge quickly.

The Economics of the Tesla Semi

If you look at average fuel prices and use the website for U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), you can see about how much it costs for a trip for a diesel truck on a highway per gallon of diesel fuel. This ends up being about $4.99.

If you use a distance of 200 miles, you can do a calculation with a miles per gallon around 6 and come up with about 34 gallons (at 5.9 miles per gallon). This is simply for the average diesel truck.

With some simple math, you can take 34 gallons * $4.99, which is $169.76 for the cost of fuel for that diesel truck. This equals about 85 cents per mile. The Tesla semi, which is an electric truck, can take that same load and move it 200 miles. With electricity, you must think about it differently.

We can use a 2 kWh per mile usage for the Tesla Semi even though Tesla says the energy consumption is less than that. This will make calculating more simple. If you take 200 miles * 2 kWh per mile, you get a total of 400 kWh consumed. Tesla can also provide an energy cost of about 7 cents per kWh.

You can then take that 400 kWh * $0.07 per kWh which equals $28 total for the 200 mile drive. This is about 14 cents per mile. With this you get:

* A diesel truck trip at 200 miles is $169.76
* A Tesla semi truck trip at 200 miles is $28.00

This is a savings of about 83% and the Tesla semi will have less wear and tear on its brakes, less maintenance due to having no engine and oil changes, along with being a source of clean energy.

For more information on this, you can see this Tweet thread by Alex Gayer:

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Jeremy Johnson is a Tesla investor and supporter. He first invested in Tesla in 2017 after years of following Elon Musk and admiring his work ethic and intelligence. Since then, he's become a Tesla bull, covering anything about Tesla he can find, while also dabbling in other electric vehicle companies. Jeremy covers Tesla developments at Torque News. You can follow him on Twitter or LinkedIn to stay in touch and follow his Tesla news coverage on Torque News.

Image Credit, Ryan Shaw, Screenshot

Comments

Khatch (not verified)    August 14, 2022 - 11:53PM

The cost per mile is essentially irrelevant when you think about the purpose of a business. Losing less money on transportation does not matter if the Tesla Semi isn’t able to carry as much product. Since Tesla still refuses to publish the carrying capacity of the semi, it doesn’t look too good at the moment.

WILLIAM WODICKA (not verified)    August 14, 2022 - 11:54PM

So many misconceptions, mostly from the naysayers. The economics are easy to figure out. To make the math easy, let's say our truckers drive 100,000 miles per year. Our author figures about $0.70 per mile in savings. That'd be $70,000 per year. Even at $35,000 per year, you'd get a pretty quick payback in the cost difference. Like, enough to buy another Tesla semi after 5 years if it dies prematurely.

As far as emissions go, a Diesel truck getting 6 mpg will emit about 3.7 lbs of CO2 per mile driven. Ballpark average. Simple math using easily available data. The average power plant in the US emits 0.85 lb CO2 per kwh. If the truck uses 2 kwh per mile, that's 1.7 lb CO2 per mile driven. So for every 10,000 miles, you save about 20,000 lbs of CO2.

I found a source that estimates the CO2 generation in the process of mining, shipping materials and producing a Tesla battery. They figure 400 lb per kwh on the high end. Less than a quarter of that on the low end. Nobody really knows, but these guys are smarter than me, so I have to assume they're in the ballpark. If you assume a 500 kwh battery that's 200,000 lb of CO2 on the high end. If you assume that other aspects of building the truck are similar to a diesel truck, It would need to go about 100,000 miles to get out of the red for carbon footprint. Now, that's on the high end. More realistically, it's probably closer to 50,000 miles. Less than a year for most truckers.

So, yeah, lithium, nickel, and cobalt mining are dirty and bad for the environment. But they don't carry the same potential for geopolitical destabilization, famine, drought, flood, and all sorts of nastiness that comes with CO2. So, much like voting, you have to choose the lesser of two evils. This one, to me, is a no-brainer.

John (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 12:29AM

Edison Motors will have an electric semi truck on the road well before Tesla even has a fully functioning prototype.

Matt Fischler (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 12:40AM

Tesla super chargers, charge 35¢ kwh.
Tesla model 3 gets 4 miles per kWh.
The Tesla semi probably gets less than 1 mile per kWh.
Let's be realistic.
Now I hope E-trucks hit the road and yes they will be less expensive to operate.
Their pay back will probably be a few years and from there on out they will be money makers just like all smart investments for the oiless future.

Matt Fischler (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 12:41AM

Tesla super chargers, charge 35¢ kwh.
Tesla model 3 gets 4 miles per kWh.
The Tesla semi probably gets less than 1 mile per kWh.
Let's be realistic.
Now I hope E-trucks hit the road and yes they will be less expensive to operate.
Their pay back will probably be a few years and from there on out they will be money makers just like all smart investments for the oiless future.

Engineering101 (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 12:47AM

Time will tell. It's ok for going from point a to point b. So far I haven't heard of any solution to the work aspect which is 70 percent of local and regional trucks. Concrete trucks, garbage trucks , boom trucks , tow trucks and many others that need to use some type of power take off pump or auxiliary unit to power working components on the truck. Electric pumps deplete the available power supply too rapidly and there are no rotating components to operate a hydraulic or direct drive pump.. It just isn't realistic for most of the market yet.

Jimmy (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 2:04AM

Without a single official document showing cargo weight capacity? Mentions of 0 to 60 speeds and range but no weight capacity? Is that range while loaded? With how much weight?

Anyone buying a semi tractor might be interested in weight capacity. Until that is discussed this whole thing is a stock pump.

Chris in AZ (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 2:22AM

Um...ever heard of Nikola? You know, the company already in production of electric semis? Why are you treating your "economic" analysis as if it's unique to Tesla's semi?

Robert Demartin (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 3:16AM

Electricity still has to come from somewhere. Either coal fired power plants, or nuclear, which the leftists don't want.

BD (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 4:20AM

Are we forgetting about the Safety Driver requirement.?. As far as I know, that hasn't been waived. That's gonna have additional impact on the cost basis that was discussed in the article.
Nobody works for free....ESPECIALLY the Teamster distribution drivers.

Homer Sipsome (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 6:39AM

Golly Wilbur...$.07/KW-hr? Is that the new Biden Inflation Reduction rate? Did tbey release the Strategic Electrical Reserve? Long as we're at it, let's have the taxpayer subsidize these new electric semis...take from the poor and give it to Elon!

Brent (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 6:43AM

The article quoted Musk as saying the truck battery would have a 500 mile range...at what weight of the truck and cargo? I don't think a battery truck will make 500 miles with 80k weight. Also, how long does it take to recharge the battery? Hours of service restrictions have to be factored into recharge time. Now of this wad touched on.

Gary Hill (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 7:08AM

I think this is a bit simplistic. What about losing40 percent of range in cold weather? How heavy a cargo are these numbers based on? What about down time for the truck while it sits charging?

Chris (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 7:27AM

First off, funny how this columnist is an investor in Tesla...guessing there's a little bias.
Second, while this all sounds great, what is the initial cost of said Tesla Semi versus a conventional diesel tractor, and how long would that truck need to run to break them even. And last, weight. If the battery pack's weight is significantly more such as those in the Tesla cars, that is less room to legally transport product out of the 80000 gvwr youre allowed. Now, instead of running 1 truck load, you're running two to comply with DOT weight regulations. It all sounds good, but everything with electric has a hidden dark cloud that no one wants to talk about. And I won't even go into the battery maintenance, replacement cost, or disposal. Not as perfect as they are made out to be. Why more tech isn't being invested in syn fuel/electric hybrid is beyond me. But, what do I know.

Scott L (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 8:08AM

It's not just about the energy used to move the truck. The part you're missing is payload. The Tesla weighs substantially more than a diesel truck. Since trucks have a maximum weight an electric loses payload capacity. This means a loss in revenue per trip.

Kevin (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 8:48AM

Jeremy needs to learn how to proofread his article. Spelling and grammar mistakes for an article published at the national level should be inexcusable.

Ed (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 9:05AM

You're right on one thing, its going to disrupt the trucking industry. How long does it take to charge fully? If the range is only 200 miles per charge, thats not all that much. Drivers only get to drive so many hours a day, downtime on driving is expensive. If a driver and drive 11 hours a day, at 65 miles per hour, thats 715 miles per day. Now add in, lets say, 1.5 hours to charge. You've now lost 97.5 miles due to charging. And if each charge only get 200 miles, thats a stop to charge roughly every 3 hours.

Diesel is a 20 minute stop, probably once a day...

Justin (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 9:06AM

What a linear article.

What does the Tesla truck cost compared to a standard diesel?

What percent of trucks drive < 500 miles per haul?

How much does cold draw the battery down?

So many more questions, but these simple one's ought to be answered in this puff piece. I'm a TSLA bull and a huge fan of electrics, but presenting one-sided vantage points is meaningless.

Richard Munroe (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 9:36AM

I am amazed that no one seems to recognize this is a perfect urban response to trucking. Use I CE trucks for a long haul and then at the cross dock transfer to an EV truck for delivery.
Urban pollution is what every right buddy recognizes in traffic jams. The green concepts of cleaning up our air in general is going to take a long time.

Jeff (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 10:21AM

You are omitting as did musk the most important thing for semi, payload. When you add up how much battery weight and the fact semis can't be over 44,000 pounds you will realize just how bad the economics will be.

Minh H Le (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 10:27AM

The author is way under estimated of charging at Tesla charger. Their average is over $0.30 per kw.

Angelo J DiPietro (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 8:46PM

In reply to by Minh H Le (not verified)

Ok lets say this all happens. Now it has been 8 months and the owners of the charging stations haven't been paid, Come to find out the trucks only have a 300 mile range and takes 6 hours to charge. So much wasted money and time because you snowflakes are dumber than we give you credit for... Us letting you find out for yourselves just to shut you up. But time for reality to step in with a slap to the face over us telling you so..

Robert Barcus (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 10:56AM

My questions would be that even if those are unmanned units, what truck stop is going to build an infrastructures at the truck stops and who is to say that many truck driver is going to give up that space to take their 10 hrs. break? We already have an over crowded truck stops as is and a tired driver is not going to care what spot he is going to back into for those solar panel drivers to take their breaks. And ad I under stand it D.O.T. still require those automated trucks to shut down for a minimum of 10 hours.

Faiz K Siddiqi (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 11:51AM

It is clean, it is cheaper per mile running cost.
But, unfortunately all the savings are eaten in the EV purchase price and battery replacement, or even more than that.

Sam (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 12:13PM

This was a lazy article. 7c/kwh? The US average is 14c. An average supercharger is double that. MAYBE if you run your own solar it's 7-8c. Also, the semi is heavier than a standard. You'll lose our on some cargo revenue for loads that are weight limited (volume limited will not be affected). All of this needs to also take into account an expected mile maintenance cost (to the benefit of electric) and driver costs (to the detriment of electric, since the loads will be smaller and as such a driver's pay will be a larger proportion). This could've been done so much better with 15 mins of work and even a basic understanding of the topic.

Vishal (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 12:18PM

What is the cost of tires?
Extra weight will reduce the life of the tires.
Add that to the cost of ownership.

Michael (not verified)    August 15, 2022 - 1:26PM

I drove OTR for 30 years and I completely support Elon, I always have have! He isn't there yet with the OTR rig but Pepsi, In N Out, Budweiser etc and it's drivers will LOVE this rig. Will steep inclines take more energy from Batteries? Will these rigs have engine braking on the down hills? Charging stations are EVERYTHING in trucking, believe me. How well does the A/C work? Take the drivers seat from the middle of the cab and move it to the left and use the passenger seat floor space for something else. Put a jump seat in the sleeper berth. Fold-down like the deadhead seats in the old 707s. Keep going Elon! Your almost there