Elon Musk has given up on solar power (on Earth)
Key takeaways
- Has Elon Musk given up on Tesla’s Master Plans, on the electrified economy, on solar power as we know it?
- A recap for those not enmeshed in the Musk-verse: Tesla has released four Master Plans over the years, and while details have varied, the through line has been electrification of the economy.
- It’s a curious turn for a businessman who built his empire on clean energy — and who has no qualms directing his companies to buy from one another.
Why this matters: a development in AI with implications for how people work, create, and decide.
Has Elon Musk given up on Tesla’s Master Plans, on the electrified economy, on solar power as we know it? From the Space X IPO filing released yesterday, it sure seems like it.
A recap for those not enmeshed in the Musk-verse: Tesla has released four Master Plans over the years, and while details have varied, the through line has been electrification of the economy. Musk put it best in his first edition: “the overarching purpose of Tesla motors…is to help expedite the move from a mine-and-burn hydrocarbon economy towards a solar electric economy.”
But recently, one of Musk’s companies, xAI, has embraced the mine-and-burn hydrocarbon economy, using dozens of unregulated natural gas turbines to power its data centers with plans to buy $2.8 billion more, effectively cementing the fossil fuel’s role in the company’s AI operations.