Tech

Tesla Supercharger catches fire at a Wawa store in New Jersey

Key Points
  • A Tesla Supercharger at a Wawa store in Parsippany, New Jersey, ignited Sunday afternoon.
  • Wawa said power was shut off to the Superchargers at its store, and that Tesla was investigating the cause.
  • Wawa plans to have Tesla Superchargers at 30 locations by the end of 2020.
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A Tesla Supercharger station located at a Wawa convenience store ignited in Parsippany, New Jersey, CNBC confirmed after images of the fire were shared on social media.

According to a Wawa spokesperson, "Tesla had an issue with their cabinet and the power has been shut off while they are investigating. Our store was unaffected as it is on a completely separate power line."

Tesla did not return multiple requests for comment.

A witness to Sunday's fire, who asked to remain unidentified because they were not authorized to speak with press, said that flames were first noticed by a neighbor across the street from the Wawa store, and reported to the fire department by this person and store employees, both.

An incident report, written by a police officer responding to the fire and obtained by CNBC, says that calls came in about a transformer fire in the parking lot of Wawa on November 17, 2019. The officer wrote, "I was advised that the Tesla Motors charging station was on fire and observed flames coming from the equipment located at the corner of the property (New Rd/Edwards Rd)."

Wawa announced plans in August to increase the number of stores that feature Tesla Supercharger stations from 16 to more than 30 by the end of 2020.

At the store site where the fire took place, Tesla's website said it had installed eight 120 Kw Superchargers, which were available around the clock to drivers.

In March, Tesla debuted a more powerful, "V3 Supercharger" that it said should enable drivers to add up to 75 miles of charge to a long-range Model 3 in just five minutes.

In its third-quarter earnings report, Tesla reiterated that it is under pressure to expand its Supercharger network to keep pace with the increasing number of its cars on the road around the world. The company cautioned investors, "If we fail to do so in a timely manner, our customers could become dissatisfied, which could adversely affect sales of our vehicles."

Wawa has convenience stores in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Florida, and Washington, D.C.

Here's a copy of the police report:

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