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Bill Gates and Elon Musk Twitter Feud Rages over Gate’s choice of Electric Porsche Taycan

Bill Gates and Elon Musk both agree that electrification will solve many of the world’s problems, so why are they fighting over a Porsche Taycan on Twitter? Is this a case of Billionaire egos or something more?

Oct 22, 2020 | By Jonathan Ho

Tech billionaires like Bill Gates and Elon Musk are often geniuses. With visions of the future, and backed by immense wealth not seen since 19th century robber barons, men like Musk and Gates have the ability to manifest their idealised society. The problem is when men with IQs over 150 disagree on what the future holds and how technologies could fundamentally shape human civilisation, the rancor can be dire as evidenced by their twitter feud beginning earlier this year over the Microsoft founder’s choice of electric vehicle.

Since retiring from day-to-day leadership of Microsoft, the Seattle-based technopreneur turned full time philanthropist devotes a lot of money and mental energy into solving some of the most pressing problems of our time – from developing clean water access for the impoverished, to deploying coronavirus vaccines quickly and safely. Bill and his wife, Melinda, have been a force for good through their charitable foundation.

Bill Gates and Elon Musk Twitter Feud: Is it really over the Porsche Taycan or just overblown?

Gates often blogs about technology and social issues at Gates Notes. Editorials can range from touching missives about his dearly departed father to most recently, an op-ed titled “How do we move around in a zero-carbon world?“. Gates highlighted that though the covid-catalysed economic slowdown reduced global emissions by around 8%, it was ultimately unsustainable given the high costs. The pandemic has cost the lives of more than 600,000 people, and put tens of millions are out of work. But the worst metric of measure, is how little a dent we put into our global emissions despite paying  such a great cost,  he wrote.

“The loss of life and economic misery caused by this pandemic are on par with what will happen regularly if we do not eliminate the world’s carbon emissions.”

Though transportation contributes only 16% of global emissions, a small percentage when compared with power consumption for our industrial needs and modern connected lifestyles, it is still a crucial element of our capitalist economy. Gates writes that even though car traffic was half of what it used to be in April 2019 and air traffic virtually came to a halt as countries locked down to flatten the curve, the costs of economic decimation were devastating. Yet he states, “The loss of life and economic misery caused by this pandemic are on par with what will happen regularly if we do not eliminate the world’s carbon emissions.”

By 2060, climate change could be just as deadly as COVID-19, and by 2100 it could be five times as deadly. – Gates Notes

He maps out a scenario that within the next 40 years, projected increases in global temperatures would raise global mortality rates to the same level of Covid-related deaths we are currently experiencing: 14 deaths per 100,000; and that by the end of this century, climate change could be responsible for 73 extra deaths per 100,000 people if emissions remain at current levels. In other words, by 2060, climate change could be just as deadly as COVID-19, and by 2100 it could be five times as deadly.

Both Musk and Gates actually agree that Electrification is one solution to climate change

“Tesla, if you had to name one company that’s helped drive that, it’s them,” – Bill Gates during an interview with Marques Brownlee for Talking Tech and 2020

If anything, the pandemic spurred economic lockdown showed that even with negligible flying and limited driving, we don’t make enough of a dent in our emissions; we also realised that when people are forced to stay home, capitalism grinds to a literal standstill. For many sectors, our ability to travel, consume and move goods from manufacturer to market, is the lifeblood of many economies. For now, the relative low cost of fossil fuels like gasoline and diesel compared to clean alternatives makes it cost-efficient for some of the world’s poorer developing nations in sub-Saharan Africa to export produce, goods and services.

If electric vehicles (EV) progresses according to Moore’s Law; an observation of historical computing trends named for Gordon Moore, the co-founder of Intel, we can expect the speed and capability of our EV technology to double every couple of years; Gates writes that the cost of batteries for Electric vehicles have dropped 85% since 2010, and so while they still contribute to the bulk of costs of an electric vehicle, making them more expensive than internal combustion engine (ICE) cars, other market factors like increased competition and the pace of new battery developments will continue to make electric cars cheaper and better with one important caveat – even though electric consumer sedans have become more affordable since the early 2000s, the backbone of many national economies still depend on long range transportation like 18-wheelers, cargo ships, and passenger jets. Could it be that what evoked Musk’s ire was that Gates didn’t believe Tesla could solve the issue of long range electric transport?

On 14 February, Gates sat down with YouTuber Marques Brownlee to talk tech and 2020: he had praised Tesla for pioneering electric vehicles and Musk for catapulting the idea of electrification into mainstream consciousness but he added that he had gotten a Porsche Taycan instead of a Tesla and while Brownlee tried to steer the conversation towards the Tesla 3, one supposes the damage was done.

“I just got a Porsche Taycan.” – Gates

Porsche vs. Tesla: Who Wins?

The EV market is small but dominates a tremendous of amount of mindshare for its relative size: While electric car makers like Tesla have projected market penetration rates of 10-20% since 2010, the truth is, electric vehicles are for the early-adopting affluent, adding up to 2% market share – but it’s a telling statistic because while cars like Tesla and the Porsche Taycan should be for everyone, they aren’t priced for everyone.

Tesla introduced the world to its Model 3 in March 2016, and though it received deposits for 373,000 vehicles, the company still  lost $283 million in the first quarter, selling 14,810 vehicles.  Losses mounted while promises to meet demand continued to fall short for years. In a 2018 interview with Bloomberg Business week, Musk admitted that he had been sleeping under his desk as he tried to move the company out of production hell, “I was wearing the same clothes for five days. My credibility, the credibility of the whole team is at stake,” he said. Musk had promised 200,000 Model 3s by end 2017 but he actually made around 2,700 EVs that year. Making matters worse, Tesla was $10 billion in debt and suffered a credit downgrade. “Insanity,” said Max Warburton, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co on Musk’s outsized vision amidst his production chaos. Even as Tesla became the most shorted US stock, the upside for Musk was enormous: if the Model 3 met its projections, Musk would remake a trillion dollar industry in his image and reduce more carbon emissions than any other person in the world.

Tesla Model 3

There’s a reason why electric cars like Tesla aren’t priced for everyone. Talented engineers have to work together on a cross-spectrum of specialised fields – batteries, design, chassis, interiors, drive systems, safety and thermodynamics; even harder still is that a low cost electric car designed to maximise range means making decisions which typically increases costs – like the irony of using expensive lightweight four piston monoblock caliper brakes typically reserved for premium cars. Then of course, there are other “impossible” design elements that Tesla Design Chief Franz von Holzhausen has to figure out like designing a car interior that doesn’t have a traditional dashboard – in short, electric cars require new ways about thinking about aesthetics, cost and performance.

Tesla designer Peter Blade and engineer Joseph Mardall then conceptualised a recessed gap across the width of the car, hidden by a strip of wood

“I don’t want any holes,” recalls von Holzhausen describing Musk’s design brief for air ventilation to Bloomberg journalist Tom Randall. Tesla designer Peter Blade and engineer Joseph Mardall then conceptualised a recessed gap across the width of the car, hidden by a strip of wood which the latter pointed out – would mean redesigning the entire ventilation system. Today, the heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) system Blade and Mardall pioneered forms the foundation for another Musk venture – systems for Space X rockets and eventually home use. To create electric cars of such complexity, it would take time to achieve the scales of mass production and cost efficiencies currently enjoyed by ICE vehicles. Make no mistake, EVs are the future but currently, they’re a luxury only the wealthy can enjoy. Does it mean you can’t make money on EVs if there’s no critical mass market of consumers? No.

An entry level Taycan costs more than an entry level Panamera, which already costs as much as a top of the line Tesla Model S. Nevertheless, the Taycan electric car still became Porsche’s best-selling car in Europe, destroying the sales of the Panamera in September 2020. In the US, Porsche’s All-Electric Taycan began outselling the country’s most popular 911 model by third quarter 2020Driven by attention grabbing feuds between behemoth billionaires and faced with a future of increasingly stringent fuel-economy and emissions regulations, EV production actually helps with overall fleet compliance, enabling continued sales of revenue friendlier petrol cars while corporations continue to funnel resources into the inevitable shift away from fossil fuels. Who wins? Everyone.

Porsche Taycan is currently the only production electric car on the planet that can technically charge in just 14 minutes at the full 350kW rate of DC fast chargers.

Porsche still sells gas powered vehicles, how does Musk make money?

In July 2020, Tesla reported finally a profit of $104 million.

The company benefited from a new factory near Shanghai that began production late last year, allowing Tesla to avoid the tariffs China imposes on imported vehicles while making its cars more affordable to the world’s largest market for electric vehicles. Tesla’s profit was also made possible by the sales of $428 million in emissions credits to other automakers. These Regulatory Zero Emissions Vehicle (ZEV) Credits are sold to other automakers who need them to meet regulatory standards. 

Currently applicable to 12 states in the US, each automobile manufacturer’s annual sales must comprise some ratio of zero-emission vehicles and because Tesla only makes electric vehicles, Musk has ZEV credits in abundance. He then sells ZEV credits to other automakers and this extra income comes at no additional costs to Tesla.

Originating in California in 1990, there’s significant upside for Tesla since only 12 of  50 states currently have a ZEV credits program. Should more states adopt the program, Musk is then able to sell more of these credits. Furthermore, according to TechCrunch, 92% of those credits are set to expire at the end of 2021 if they’re not used and since more than half of the current balance is held by three manufacturers, and the availability of these or future credits is inherently uncertain, suggesting a run on ZEV credits in the future. Recent filings show that GM and Fiat Chrysler have bought zero-emissions vehicle credits from Tesla. (Perhaps it rubbed Musk the wrong way that Gates only name-dropped GM in his blog and not Tesla)

Tesla has raked close to $2 billion in revenue since 2010 when it started selling emissions credits to automakers that needed to offset sales of polluting vehicles but as traditional ICE automobile makers are shifting towards ZEVs and hybrids, they will eventually be able to comply with the ZEV program without having to buy additional ZEV credits from Tesla.

It’s difficult to write off Musk as raving lunatic when he’s often misunderstood (only 5 points separate his 155 IQ to Gate’s 160). After all, he was mocked in 2002 when the then 31 year old software entrepreneur with no background in aerospace founded Space X. Today, Musk launches more rockets a year than any other company.

And of course, media like us have often criticised or made light of his “gaffes” as with the Tesla Cybertruck’s contentious design and it’s broken bulletproof windows, but truth is – his antics have gotten him free publicity and media airtime, so much so that he recently closed his PR department. A twitter feud with between two of the top 10 smartest people in the world is simply good business, after all, Musk himself admits, his competition is ICE cars, not other makers of non-Tesla EVs.


 
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