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A red Tesla Model 3 parked and charging on a London street
A Tesla Model 3 charges. A job advert for Tesla Electric said it would be able to ‘support the transition of the entire electricity grid to 100% renewables’. Photograph: William Barton/Alamy
A Tesla Model 3 charges. A job advert for Tesla Electric said it would be able to ‘support the transition of the entire electricity grid to 100% renewables’. Photograph: William Barton/Alamy

Elon Musk’s Tesla plans to launch electricity supplier in Britain

This article is more than 9 months old

Tesla Electric seeks executive ‘with healthy scepticism of status quo’ to manage entry into UK energy market

Elon Musk’s Tesla is poised to disrupt Britain’s energy market with the launch of a new household supplier.

The maker of electric cars, which also runs an energy supply business in the US, plans to begin selling electricity to homes and running “virtual power plants”, according to a recent job listing.

The listing for Tesla Electric, which supplies electricity to households that own Tesla products such as cars or batteries, called for a new executive “with a healthy scepticism of the status quo” to manage the company’s entry into the UK market.

The advert for a head of operations, which was first reported by the Daily Telegraph, said Tesla Electric would be able to “support the transition of the entire electricity grid to 100% renewables”.

It is understood that Tesla may be planning to help customers who own a Tesla Powerwall battery, solar panels or one of its electric vehicles to store electricity when it is cheap, and sell electricity back to the grid when market prices are higher.

This can help households avoid peaks in market prices when renewable electricity is in short supply, and help the grid do without fossil fuels by making better use of renewable electricity.

Tesla first launched its household supply deals in Texas late last year, and offered drivers who bought its Model 3 car between May and June a year of free, overnight vehicle charging at home when they signed up with Tesla Electric as their retail electricity provider. After the first year, drivers would default to Tesla’s standard overnight charging rate of $1 a day.

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Tesla took its first step into the British market three years ago by applying to the energy regulator for Great Britain to be an electricity generator. Ofgem granted its licence in June 2020.

At the time, industry observers speculated that Tesla might be planning to build large-scale battery storage projects in the UK, after its success building a 100MW storage scheme in less than 100 days in Australia.

A generation licence would also allow Tesla to aggregate customers across the country and, in effect, create a virtual power plant. Similar tariffs for households with batteries or solar panels are already available from suppliers including Octopus Energy and Ovo Energy.

Earlier this year, Tesla set out a “master plan” to eliminate fossil fuels from the world economy by relying on electrification and smart power storage technologies.

Tesla’s report found that a sustainable energy economy was “technically feasible” and would require “less investment and less material extraction” than continuing to support an unsustainable energy economy.

The company’s call to revolt against the fossil fuel industry by eliminating fossil fuels through a “hugely and politically difficult” carbon tax would not extend to Musk’s SpaceX venture.

More on this story

More on this story

  • ‘Watershed moment’ for Tesla as Elon Musk’s visit to China reaps quick reward

  • Share of electricity generated by fossil fuels in Great Britain drops to record low

  • Scottish Power to pay out £1.5m after overcharging 1,700 households

  • How soon can Tesla get its more affordable car to the market?

  • Tesla shares under pressure after carmaker announces price cuts

  • Only 1,500 people compensated so far over prepayment meters, Ofgem says

  • New blow to British smart meter rollout as number of faulty machines leaps to 4m

  • Tesla cuts prices around the world as sales decline in a chaotic week

  • Tesla to cut 14,000 jobs as Elon Musk aims to make carmaker ‘lean and hungry’

  • UK government accused of trying to ‘stoke culture war on climate issues’

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