It Happened! Elon Musk Leaks $0.06/Wh Semi-Solid-State Battery, 4 Mins Charging! China LFP Killer? We all know the truth: Batteries have long been the weakest link in the electric vehicle world—not the design, not the range, but the cost of manufacturing and replacing them. Ask any car salesperson, and they’ll likely dodge the question. Why? Because no one has managed to bring battery replacement costs down to a level consumers can afford. But now, the 24M semi-solid-state battery claims to do just that, thanks to its simplified design with semi-solid-state cells, fewer components, and sandwich-style assembly. The result? Lower fire risk, easier recycling, a remarkably low cost of just $0.06 per watt hour , and the ability to fully charge in just four minutes.
July 2025 – Austin, Texas
In what could be the biggest energy breakthrough of the decade, Elon Musk has reportedly leaked internal Tesla documents confirming a semi-solid-state battery technology with shocking specs: charging time under 4 minutes, lifespan over 2 million miles, and a production cost of just $0.06 per watt-hour — less than half the cost of current LFP batteries produced in China.

Yes, you read that right.
If the leak is real (and early signals say it is), this isn’t just a game-changer — it’s a potential deathblow to Chinese dominance in EV battery manufacturing.
The Leak That Started It All
The news broke early Tuesday morning when an anonymous post on X (formerly Twitter) shared what appeared to be Tesla internal documentation labeled “Project Titanite: Final Energy Cell Chemistry Approval.” Within hours, multiple Tesla insiders confirmed that the battery tech had been in late-stage development at Giga Texas for over a year.
The leak included:
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A detailed spec sheet listing:
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450 Wh/kg energy density
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Charging time: 4 mins to 80%
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Cycle life: 12,000+
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Thermal degradation rate: 3% over 10 years
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Material cost estimates: $0.06/Wh
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A production rollout timeline: Q2 2026
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A hand-signed note from “EM”: “This changes everything. We go in-house, or we die.”
While neither Musk nor Tesla has publicly confirmed the leak, Musk posted shortly after the story broke:
“Some truths are hard to keep buried. Especially when they glow.”
That was enough for most analysts to start treating the leak as fact.
What Is a Semi-Solid-State Battery?
Unlike traditional lithium-ion or lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries — which use liquid electrolytes — solid-state batteries use solid electrolytes, promising higher energy density and improved safety. However, fully solid-state batteries have proven difficult and expensive to mass-produce.

Tesla’s semi-solid-state approach uses gel-like or partially solid electrolytes, blending performance, cost-effectiveness, and manufacturability.
Key benefits:
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Lower risk of thermal runaway
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Faster ion transfer
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Improved charge retention
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Reduced reliance on rare earth materials
In other words: safer, cheaper, longer-lasting, and insanely fast-charging.
China’s LFP Market: In Trouble?
China currently dominates EV battery production — with over 70% of the global market in LFP batteries. CATL and BYD have driven prices down and flooded the market with affordable, reliable cells.
But if Tesla’s leaked $0.06/Wh semi-solid battery goes into mass production by 2026, it could:
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Undercut China’s lowest-cost LFP (currently $0.10–0.13/Wh)
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Outperform LFP in charge time (4 mins vs. 30–45 mins)
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Outlast LFP by 5–6x in cycle life
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Eliminate need for cobalt and nickel entirely
Tesla could fully in-source battery production, ending reliance on Chinese supply chains. And that might explain the timing — just as U.S.–China tech tensions heat up and federal EV incentives favor American-made components.
What Does This Mean for Tesla Cars?
If Tesla integrates this new battery tech into its vehicle lineup, it would create the world’s first mass-market EVs capable of:
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Charging in the time it takes to buy coffee
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Lasting over 1 million miles without a battery swap
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Holding 500+ miles of range in a lighter, cheaper package
Rumors are already swirling that this tech will first appear in the Tesla Model 2, expected to be announced in early 2026 at a base price of under $25,000.

Even the Tesla Semi and Cybertruck — long criticized for battery weight and inefficiencies — could get upgraded by 2027.
What’s Next?
With Gigafactories in Texas, Nevada, and Berlin already scaling production, analysts believe Tesla is planning to cut ties with third-party battery suppliers altogether — a monumental shift in its vertical integration strategy.
Industry reactions have ranged from “revolutionary” to “possibly fabricated”, but most agree: if the leak is real and Tesla delivers, the future of EVs just arrived… early.
Elon Musk may have just flipped the switch on the next energy war.