Sean Duffy, fresh off his confirmation as Donald Trump’s secretary of transportation, signed a memorandum to “start the process of resetting Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards, which will ultimately lower the price of a car for American consumers and eliminate the electric vehicle mandate,” his office said in a statement. There is no EV mandate, of course, and rolling back federal fuel economy rules will ultimately increase oil consumption and release more carbon dioxide into the environment during a global climate crisis. But at least we’ll get cheap cars! (We won’t.)
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If you can find them, that is. While there aren’t a lot of new V4 posts out there yet, they’re supposed to support up to 500kW of fast charging once Tesla upgrades the on-site cabinets. For now, locations with the newly-designed stalls will support 325kW charging for Cybertrucks. Electrek notes that Elon Musk once suggested V3 would be capable of more than 350kW.




Chinese regulators are issuing a notice about a Tesla software update for 1.2 million vehicles to fix a problem with CPUs that can short out and prevent safety equipment like the rear-view cameras from working.
Tesla issued a similar recall update earlier this month for 200,000 vehicles in the US.



The EV tax credit is still alive and kicking — but for how long?


While Elon Musk is making suspiciously fascist hand gestures at Trump rallies, the value of his company’s brand is dropping. Tesla sunk 26 percent in 2024 compared to the previous year, according to an annual ranking of top brands by London-based Brand Finance. And it wouldn’t be the first time that Tesla’s aging lineup and the political antics of its chief executive have resulted in a loss of brand reputation.
Kathy Harris, clean vehicle director at NRDC, swats down one of Trump’s falsehoods about Biden’s EV incentives:
“There is no `EV mandate,’” Harris said in a statement, “but Trump’s move to repeal existing standards and federal investments would be a huge blow to the U.S. auto industry – and bad news for American drivers. Fat-cat oil executives are the only ones cracking open the champagne about this one.
“Still, this is not the end of this story. The administration will need to follow the facts and the law in making any changes to the electric vehicle incentives or the federal vehicle standards and state waivers. Our lawyers are watching. If the administration tries to cut corners or ignore the law, they will end up in court.”
As reported by TechCrunch, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is expanding the investigation into the driver-assistance software, which was announced last April.
The NHTSA’s analysis found that “system limitations relating to the detection of stationary vehicles while traveling at highway speeds and in nighttime lighting conditions appear to be factors in collisions under investigation and several apparently similar near-miss, non-crash reports.”

Our tech overlords all have problems, and they want to buy the solutions.
This clip of a Tesla failing to correctly identify a passing train reminds me of Elon Musk’s deep-seeded antagonism toward public transportation. (He thinks it’s a “pain in the ass.”) I’m sure that’s not exactly why the train appears in the Tesla UX as, like, a bunch of squished, stretched-out cars. But still, makes you think.




The automaker announced its upgraded MBUX Virtual Assistant at CES last year, which can carry conversations with passengers. However, it did not share the LLM partner behind the technology at the time, which we now know is Google Cloud with this new tailor-made vehicular AI Agent running on Vertex AI.
Correction: MBUX Virtual Assistant was announced at CES 2024, not 2025.

The outgoing transportation secretary on EVs, robotaxis, Trump, Musk, and the work still left to do.
Although it’s “not decided at the moment,” Jeep’s Eric LaForge thinks the Recon EV “will be a strong alternative to Wrangler” in the European market, according to Autocar.
The company is already preparing to replace the Grand Cherokee with the all-electric Wagoneer S in Europe this year as it works to make EVs 100 percent of its sales there by 2030.









































