The exclusivity just ended to allow Rivian more sales. But Amazon is still invested in Rivian and they have not changed their order. This is from 27 November 2024:
Rivian is having a hard time with meeting their current commitments. Amazon let them out of their contract to try and find new customers and clients to make more money. Amazon is a 15%shareholder and lost nine hundred million dollars on their investment.
Everything you need to know about how Amazon is decarbonizing its delivery fleet in partnership with Rivian.
www.aboutamazon.com
And Amazon is actually late to the party. Deutsche Post (DHL in Canada) has owned an EV manufacturing company that provides their electric delivery vehicles for over a decade:
en.m.wikipedia.org
They've been doing this since before the talking heads you follow told you to get your pitch fork and join the culture war on batteries.
No culture war and no talking heads here. Thanks for the insults they add to the Discussion and make me realize the passion and emotions one argues with using insults turns what I thought was a Discussion into an ideologists way to force their theirs thoughts on others.
Discussion,ne reason to throw insults around.
If a logistic fleet is not mostly electrified for last mile delivery by 2035, they'll be toast. Even if oil is $50/bbl. They all know that. And they are all racing there and locking down suppliers.
Why are they toast?
Closer to home, if you haven't seen one of
these, you will soon:
You can always put a sign on your door telling them you won't take any packages from an EV delivery truck. I'm sure the drivers will appreciate one less drop.
Funny you say that, when the electric delivery van ran out of power dude with a generator went and charged him up.
You argue to the extreme and make threats,insults and negative comments towards others. Which makes people want to argue not discuss with you.
Smarten up.
DHL is looking at 60-65% of their fleet to be electrified by 2030.
I have to ask you, in order for every household to replace their ICE with electric vehicles.
1 How much of a direct power demand will be required to charge electric vehicles?
2 Can we realistically provide the power demand in a reasonable time frame?
3. How much infrastructure will be required, what is the cost of doing such?
4 can we upgrade infrastructure in a reasonable time frame?
5 What is our current electricity consumption for our grids?
6 What is our maximum electricity output from our current grids?
7. What is the maximum output from our grids?
8 What are the net output from our grids?
Let's get a real discussion going, or we can just start RAISING OUR VOICES and throwing insults around......
What you call an electric car stopped on the side of a road? Dead
Or how about
95% of the EVs sold in America are still on the road today. The rest were able to be driven home.
Cheers, if your open for a Discussion with out calling people "heads" then cool otherwise take a hike climb up your self absorb jt,js trees.