Tesla Superchargers Now Line The Silk Road

Via Zap Map, an interesting update on the Silk Road Supercharger corridor:

Tesla China has now completed the Silk Road Supercharger corridor and says it is the longest it has built to date. According to a tweet from Tesla’s Chinese account, the route from east to west in China reaches just over 3,100 miles.

The new corridor has 27 Supercharger stations, positioning a charging station roughly every 60 to 180 miles. According to Tesla, the line of charge points covers cities starting from Zhoushan, the eastern coastal hub, passing through Sanmenxia, Xi’an, Tianshui, Zhangye, Shanshan, Wusu and Bole, and extending to Horgos on the border with Kazakhstan.

Alongside the news, Tesla China also posted a video celebrating the occasion. With subtitles, it shows drivers taking in many of the scenic, historic sites along the Silk Road.

Among the oldest trading routes connecting the West and the East, the former Silk Road has seen a resurgence in recent years. In 2013, the Chinese government put forward the strategic concept of building the ‘New Silk Road Economic Belt and the ’21st Century Maritime Silk Road’ in an effort to revive economic ties.

At present, China is the world’s largest electric vehicle market. Last year, Tesla sold 120,000 vehicles in the country, accounting for about 30% of its total delivery in 2020. Tesla then reportedly significantly increased deliveries of its electric vehicles produced in China in May after a surprising decline in April. According to figures from the China Passenger Car Association (CPCA), Tesla delivered 33,463 Model 3 and Model Y from the Gigafactory in Shanghai in May.

5000 kms with 27 Supercharger Stations????Tesla opens the longest Supercharger route from east to west in China??#TheSilkRoute @TeslaCharging pic.twitter.com/QUucp0qjK3

— Tesla Greater China (@teslacn) June 19, 2021

Local production has also accelerated the Supercharger roll-out since Tesla China began making V3 Supercharger stations in Shanghai in February 2021. The plant can produce up to 10,000 charging stations per year. Construction had started in August 2020 and was completed in about half a year – in line with internal deadlines.

Assuming ten stalls per Supercharger location, the new factory could theoretically equip up to 1,000 new locations per year. By way of comparison, Tesla built 743 new sites with 7,173 charging points worldwide in the entire year 2020. To date, they claim to run over 20,000 charge points globally.



This entry was posted on Sunday, July 4th, 2021 at 6:15 am and is filed under New Silk Road.  You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.  Both comments and pings are currently closed. 

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