3 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Electric Cars Archive

Archives for April 2025

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
The Tesla Cybercab is likely to be a sales dud, according to Tesla.

Tesla conducted an internal analysis last year that concluded its upcoming driverless Cybercab is shaping up to be another Cybertruck-level flop, The Information reports:

One of the first assumptions was that the U.S. car market could shrink from 15 million a year to roughly 3 million because Robotaxis would be used for five times as many hours as privately owned cars, which sit in driveways and parking lots most of the time. Then the analysts subtracted Americans who wouldn’t switch to a driverless EV. These included people in rural parts of the country who often travel vast distances that are impractical for Robotaxis; suburbanites with kids and complicated pickup and drop-off schedules; and active people who routinely cart around a surfboard or a mountain bike.

That pushed probable annual Robotaxi sales well below 1 million vehicles a year. “There is ultimately a saturation of people who want to be ferried around in somebody else’s car,” said one person familiar with the situation.

Of course, Elon Musk doesn’t really care whether it succeeds or fails. AI is Tesla’s future, for better or worse. (It will be worse.)

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
You can’t spell ‘S3XY’ without ‘S’ and ‘X’.

Tesla has stopped taking orders in China for new Model S and Model X EVs, which are manufactured exclusively in California and imported. With tariffs now at 125 percent on US imports, you can guess why.

It will still sell its Model 3 and updated Model Y, which are built in Shanghai and make up the overwhelming majority of its Chinese sales — Reuters reports it imported fewer than 2,000 S and X vehicles in 2024.

Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
Tesla’s new cheaper Cybertruck also has longest range.

Elon Musk’s new single-motor RWD political-statement-on-wheels starts at $69,900, making it the cheapest Cybertruck yet, according to Teslarati. With a range of 350 miles, it also bests the dual-motor AWD model by 25 miles. Range can be extended to 362 miles when opting for the $750 soft tonneau cover but swastikas might be added for free. US deliveries begin in June.

Umar Shakir
Umar Shakir
Is that the electric truck backed by Jeff Bezos?

Sean O’Kane reported earlier this week that Amazon chairman Jeff Bezos is backing a new EV startup called Slate Auto, and now a user on Reddit posted a spy shot of what might be the company’s first vehicle.

A source confirmed to TechCrunch that the pictured EV pickup is real and may be a concept to show potential investors.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
You can now buy a refreshed Tesla Model Y, but should you?

Tesla is certainly sweetening the pot by offering the cheaper Long Range All-Wheel Drive version, which starts at $50,630 including destination and order fees. But given all the chaos swirling around Elon Musk and his company, I can’t recommend this purchase in good conscience. Sure, the Model Y is a very popular car — it was once the best selling car in the world, EV or otherwise — but there are now plenty of EVs you can buy that are not associated with controversial billionaires who make fascist salutes and brag about feeding humanitarian aid programs “into the wood chipper.“ Just saying.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
What if Jeff Bezos built an EV company?

We may found out soon enough, as TechCrunch senior reporter (and Verge alumni) Sean O’Kane discovered that Bezos is secretly funding an EV startup called Slate Auto. The company is connected to another Bezos venture, Re: Build Manufacturing, and is reportedly working on a two-door, sub-$25,000 electric pickup as its first EV. Slate is also planning a lineup of accessories for owners to customize their vehicles. Sounds interesting, but I don’t envy Bezos trying to launch a new EV company amid market chaos and a global trade war. To be sure, the guy loves competing with Elon Musk!