daveo4EV
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- David
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but the access is subject to Tesla's control - the entire network is not accessable at this time…No EV manufacturer in Europe has or needs a contract with Tesla for their customers to be able charging at Tesla Superchargers in Europe.
while the plug is the same - access is still subject to Tesla's discretion - in the UK in particluar it's not fully open…that's true of any charging vendor anywhere- none of he other vendor's choose to enforce this option - the only authorization required is payment.
Will more sites open to non-Tesla vehicles?
We’re starting with a select number of sites so that we can review the experience, monitor congestion and assess feedback before expanding. Future sites will only be opened to non-Tesla vehicles if there is available capacity.
according to Tesla only some of their sites allow non-Tesla's - not the entire network…they could do that - but so far they have not and are not required to do so.
Tesla owns the network - they don't have to provide access…and my Local Porsche dealer in Monterey won't let me use their CCS charger - I'm not authorzied - even though it has the correct plug - NOTE: in conversations with them they are having reliability problems with the charger and it spends most of it's time offline/non-functional since installation and it's proving ineffective for their private service/new-car delivery needs…
GM and Ford apparently "convinced" Tesla to grant them access to the entire network in North America…Tesla owning the network in North America has been less than motivated to open it to other vendors with out appropriate incentives - apparently GM/Ford felt they had no choice given their experience with the "open" CCS network providers in North America.
my understanding of the Euro regulation is compatibility is assured (plug & charging protocol) - but access is not mandatory and can be restricted by the charging vendor for any reason (business or otherwise)- and to date is restricted by Tesla - Tesla as an operating business has decided to grant access to some but not their entire network in europe "yet"…eventually they may provide access to all locations unrestricted - but that day is not today.
but it matter's less in Europe because the other networks seem to be run more competently than the one's here in the US - so Tesla does not have the freedom to restrict access to only their customers.
for what ever and many reasons that is not the case in North America - and the non-Tesla charging vendors are simply not providing a competitive alternative. Tesla apparently is the only charging vendor that provides a reliable service. So they have market advantage…
Nothing I'm aware of prevents EVGo/Chargepoint/Electrify America from providing reliable service - but they've had several years to do so and to date the record is less than stellar. So we're stuck with having to negotiate with Tesla.
In the greater Seattle area there are 133 CCS charging sites - but less than 20 of those sites offer any reliable charging performance above 70 kW based on plug share reliability data - and of the sites that are reliable there are fewer than 25 actual CCS stalls functional for a metro area of greater than 3 million people…
Tesla's supercharger network in the same region by contrast offers 17 sites with over 150 stalls and each site has a nearly perfect 10 reliability rating in plugshare…
what's CCS 1 based EV vendor in North America to do?
in the US as of this posting's date 12 sites are open to non-Tesla customers in North America - no negotiation required (2 in california and 10 in greater New York area) - the adapter is provided "on stie"…so any CCS vehicle can simply arrive & charge if they need to charge at those 12 sites - Tesla I would assume plans to extend this to more sites in North America…but that is hardly a plan for other vendor's to rely on for their customer's road tripping needs…
Ford and GM decided they needed the entire network for their customers - not just bits and pieces of it. So they engaged Tesla to provide complete access for their entire fleet of CCS vehicle's. This will be a competitive advantage for them in North America vs. any CCS 1 EV vendor that choose to avoid similar engagement with Tesla.
I welcome correction if I'm wrong.
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