Too many carmakers are aiming to take on Tesla

Tesla Model X Elon Musk
Tesla Model X Elon Musk

(Tesla CEO Elon Musk at an event to launch the Tesla Model X SUV.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

It's easy to get distracted from Tesla's greatest achievement.

Elon Musk's upstart automaker builds fast, sexy electric cars that are prized by the Silicon Valley elite.

They are the ultimate rolling status toys, $100,000-plus rides that can, in some configurations, outrun Ferraris and Lamborghinis.

That's all wonderful, but Tesla's most meaningful "disruption" of the century-old auto industry is more prosaic: The company created a market that really didn't exist before.

True, General Motors and other companies had developed and sold electric cars. But they never sold in significant numbers. And even in the post-financial-crisis period, with more electric vehicles rolling off assembly lines than ever before, they constitute only about 1% of the global market for automobiles.

They haven't made a dent.

But Tesla is growing rapidly, roughly doubling its deliveries each year (about 50,000 in 2015, close to 100,000 in 2016, and half a million by 2018, if the company executes on Musk's ambitions). There are nearly 400,000 preorders, at $1,000 apiece, for the Model 3 mass-market vehicle, scheduled to launch late next year. That's an unprecedented number in the industry.

Does it mean there's vast, untapped demand for electric cars? I don't think so. Rather, I think it means there's vast, untapped demand for Teslas.

Chasing the wrong future

Chevy Bolt
Chevy Bolt

(The Chevy Bolt.Chevrolet)

Tesla has made history by creating a notable market that didn't exist before. But it's far from clear whether that market will grow to include vehicles that aren't Teslas. An early test will be the new Chevy Bolt, a $30,000 electric vehicle, after tax incentives, with a range of about 240 miles on a single charge; the car went into production in October. If its sales quickly match Tesla's, we'll have a solid indication that what consumers want are relatively inexpensive EVs. If they don't, we'll have confirmation that consumers ultimately just want Teslas.

In any case, unless growth picks up in the EV space, automakers will have a difficult time making their electric-car programs work. Many major automakers are offering grand electric-mobility plans. Volkswagen, for instance, is trying to recover from its emission-cheating scandal by resetting itself as a future big-time provider of electric vehicles.

As we head into the heart of the auto-show season, we're seeing numerous new electric-car concepts. Electric freight trucks are a big discussion topic. No one wants to get left behind.