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BP to Acquire Tesla Supercharger Tech in $100 Million Deal

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BP will acquire Tesla’s fast charging hardware for $100 million, marking the first time Tesla has sold its Supercharger tech directly to a third-party network.

The chargers will be rolled out across BP’s EV charging division, bp pulse, starting in 2024, and will initially be installed at locations operated by BP, Amoco, TravelCenters of America, and Thorntons.

The purchase will add over 3,000 Tesla chargers to BP’s North American charging footprint. These are V4 units, capable of operating at 250 kW and equipped with Tesla’s Magic Dock connector, which supports both NACS and CCS vehicles.

This enables BP to serve both Tesla drivers and non-Tesla EVs without requiring adapter infrastructure. It also aligns with the voluntary industry shift toward NACS as more automakers — GM, Ford, Rivian, Mercedes-Benz — commit to supporting the standard by 2025.

Industry Shifts and Strategic Implications

The deal signals two shifts.

First, Tesla’s move to license its Supercharger tech reflects a broader pivot from a closed ecosystem to infrastructure monetization. Until now, Superchargers were tightly integrated into Tesla’s proprietary service stack. Selling to BP opens a new revenue channel and positions Tesla as a hardware supplier in addition to a network operator.

Second, it marks an inflection point for bp pulse, which has lagged in charger deployment and reliability. CEO Richard Bartlett called the Tesla tech a “step change” that will help the company scale quickly across key metro and highway locations. The company recently pledged to invest $1 billion in EV charging infrastructure in the U.S. by 2030, part of a global $500 million commitment over the next two to three years.

Beyond a Single Transaction

This isn’t a one-off order. BP is embedding Tesla technology into its service model, and technicians from Tesla will install many of the first wave of chargers. The system will integrate with BP’s own fleet and retail management software.

While Tesla will not run the chargers, the operational partnership points to a growing segmentation in the EV charging market:

  • Tesla expands as a hardware and connector standard provider
  • BP accelerates as a deployment and operating partner, especially in multi-brand locations
  • The NACS/CCS dual-standard approach becomes baseline for public fast charging

The first Tesla-built chargers in this deal are expected to come online in early 2024. If execution meets expectations, this could set a precedent for other oil majors and fleet operators seeking to shortcut years of charger development by buying proven tech off the shelf.

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Filip Bubalo
Filip Bubalo

Researcher & writer for Charging Stack. Marketing manager at PROTOTYP where I help mobility companies tell better stories. Writing about the shift to electric vehicles, micromobility, and how cities are changing — with a mix of data, storytelling, and curiosity. My goal? Cut through the hype, make things clearer, and spotlight what actually works.

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