By Reuters | Updated: 8 October 2022
PepsiCo confirmed on Friday it would take delivery of Tesla’s Semi trucks on December 1, becoming the first company to receive its orders of the much-delayed electric vehicle.
PepsiCo said in a statement that the trucks would be used at its Frito-Lay plant in Modesto, California, and its PepsiCo beverages factory in Sacramento. PepsiCo has been aiming to reduce fuel costs and emissions, and reserved 100 of the trucks in 2017.
US companies have pledged to take action to reduce their impacts on the environment, with PepsiCo aiming to achieve net-zero emissions by 2040.
Transp
ortation accounts for roughly 10 percent of the Mountain Dew maker’s greenhouse gas emissions, PepsiCo’s CEO, Ramon Laguarta, has said. Its company-owned fleet travelled 1.2 billion miles (around 2 billion km) last year.
Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk announced the start of production of the Semi truck late on Thursday on Twitter, saying the vehicles have a 500-mile (805 km) range and are “super fun to drive.”
Musk initially said the trucks would be in production by 2019 but the timeline has been delayed by years due to parts shortages.
Other companies including United Parcel Service, Walmart Canada, and food service distributor Sysco had also placed preorders for Tesla’s Semi trucks.
Walmart, UPS, and Sysco did not respond to requests for comment on the status of their orders or delivery timings.
Neither Musk nor Pepsi disclosed the number of Semis that would arrive at the packaged food company in December. On its website, PepsiCo said it expects 15 of its trucks to deploy by the end of this year.
Tesla, on the other hand, has been struggling to deliver as many electric vehicles as it produces, which has hurt its share price. Musk is also trying to close his $44 billion (roughly Rs. 3.6 lakh crore) takeover of Twitter, which has Tesla investors worried that the billionaire was spreading himself too thin.
© Thomson Reuters 2022