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Elon Musk says Tesla aims to make 200,000 Cybertrucks a year

Tesla CEO Elon Musk revised the EV-maker's production target for the Cybertruck to 200,000 annually with first deliveries to begin on Nov. 30 nearly four years after its unveiling.

Tesla is aiming to make 200,000 units of its electric pickup truck, Cybertruck, per year, Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said on Tuesday.

The company had earlier said that Tesla had the capacity to make more than 125,000 Cybertrucks annually, with Musk adding there was potential to lift it to 250,000 in 2025.

ELON MUSK WANTS TO ‘TEMPER EXPECTATIONS’ ON TESLA CYBERTRUCK; THINKS IT'S ‘OUR BEST PRODUCT EVER’

The deliveries of the much-awaited pickup truck will begin on Nov. 30, nearly four years after it was unveiled by Musk at an event in Los Angeles, where his head of design cracked the vehicle's "armor glass" window with a metal ball while demonstrating a series of tests to the audience.

On the "Joe Rogan Experience" podcast released Tuesday, Musk reiterated how hard it was to produce the Cybertruck.

ELON MUSK SAYS HE'S WORRIED ABOUT THE ‘HIGH INTEREST RATE ENVIRONMENT WE’RE IN'

"We're aiming to make about 200,000 a year at point production ... maybe a little more, but I just can't emphasize enough that manufacturing is much much harder than the initial design," Musk said about the futuristic-looking Cybertruck.

"We dug our own grave with Cybertruck," he had said on an earnings call earlier this month, adding the company could face "enormous challenges" in ramping up production and making it cash-flow positive.

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