Following Ford Motor
Volkswagen Is Making Significant Effort To Save Costs
Volkswagen also announced it aims to save $4.37 billion next year by cutting its admin staff costs at its flagship brand by 20%. Reducing the size of its workforce is part of a wider restructuring strategy that aims to slash group costs by 10 billion euros by 2026. Volkswagen announced that staff reductions will kick off in January. Under its master plan, Volkswagen is also planning to shorten new car development time to three years, along with cutting the number of test vehicles it builds in half. As its CEO Thomas Schäfer admitted, Volkswagen is no longer competitive and is therefore, taking measures at all levels to get back on track, along with admitting the EV charging superiority of Tesla.
GM Is Also Slashing More Than 900 Jobs
After recalling robotaxis early last month, General Motors announced it will be cutting about a quarter of its Cruise unit workforce. General Motors already absorbed big losses while developing its driverless service that was supposed to bring in revenue of $1 billion by 2025. GM also announced it will be slowing down its spending in Cruise.
Creating A More Sustainable Future Of Transportation Goes Beyond EVs, Which Is Where Green Tech Comes In
Worksport Ltd
Stellantis Is The Last Automaker Standing Outside Tesla's Charging Network
Although quite late with BMW, Mini, and Mercedes-Benz adopting Tesla's charging standard a while back, Volkswagen drivers gained access to 15,000 Superchargers across North America. Stellantis, with Jeep, Chrysler, Ram, Dodge, Peugeot and Fiat brands under its umbrella, remains the last who did not enter the supercharging network of Tesla.
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