Tesla manufacturing director Benjamin Bate leaves for Chemelex

Benjamin Bate, Tesla's Director of Vehicle Operations and Engineering at its Fremont factory, has departed after more than eight years to join Chemelex as a plant manager. His exit adds to a ongoing wave of high-level departures at the electric vehicle maker. The move highlights challenges in retaining experienced manufacturing talent amid shifting company priorities.

Benjamin Bate spent over eight years at Tesla, starting in January 2018 as Maintenance and Controls Manager for paint operations at the Fremont factory. He advanced through several roles, including Senior Manufacturing Manager for Paint Operations from August 2019 to April 2020, Senior Manager for General Assembly Operations from April to December 2020, and Director of Manufacturing for Model 3 and Model Y from December 2020 to August 2023. In his final position as Director of Vehicle Operations and Engineering, appointed in August 2023, Bate oversaw production of Tesla's best-selling vehicles at its key Fremont site for nearly three years.

Before joining Tesla, Bate worked at Ford for nearly two years as a Manufacturing Engineering Manager in paint operations in Kansas City. Now, he has taken up the role of Plant Manager at Chemelex, a Redwood City-based company specializing in electric thermal and sensing solutions—a departure from electric vehicle manufacturing to industrial equipment.

Bate's exit, confirmed via his LinkedIn profile, is the latest in a series of departures from Tesla over the past two years. Notable exits include Drew Baglino, who led powertrain and energy engineering for 18 years, in April 2024; Model Y program manager Emmanuel Lamacchia and Cybertruck program head Siddhant Awasthi in November 2025; and Omead Afshar, who oversaw sales and manufacturing in North America and Europe, in mid-2025. Other losses encompass Tesla's long-time head of software David Lau, top car designers, the top crash safety architect, head of North American sales, and the director of Tesla Energy products.

Tesla has faced a 10% layoff in April 2024, contributing to the talent drain. Reports indicate the company prefers recruiting young graduates over experienced veterans, potentially exacerbating morale issues and boredom among engineers as focus shifts toward autonomy and robotics rather than vehicle innovation. TSLA shares traded 2% lower following the news, with the company set to report fourth-quarter earnings soon. Over the past 12 months, the stock has gained 11%.

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Realistic photo illustration of Tesla Cybertruck and Model Y vehicles outside headquarters, with empty desks and resignation letters representing the program managers' departures amid shift to AI and robotics.
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Tesla's Cybertruck and Model Y program managers resign

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Siddhant Awasthi, who led Tesla's Cybertruck and Model 3 programs, announced his departure after eight years with the company. Hours later, Emmanuel Lamacchia, the Model Y program manager, also confirmed he was leaving after nearly eight years. The exits add to a series of senior departures amid Tesla's shift toward AI and robotics.

Two key Tesla executives, Siddhant Awasthi and Emmanuel Lamacchia, announced their departures from the company on November 10, 2025, after eight years each. Awasthi led the Cybertruck and Model 3 programs, while Lamacchia oversaw the Model Y, Tesla's best-selling vehicle. The exits add to a series of high-profile departures amid slowing sales and a strategic shift toward AI and robotics.

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Following its Q4 2025 earnings call announcement to end Model S and X production by Q2 2026, Tesla debuted its third-generation Optimus humanoid robot on February 2, 2026, via Weibo, confirming plans to repurpose Fremont factory lines for up to one million units annually amid EV sales declines. CEO Elon Musk highlighted Optimus's transformative potential in robotics.

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Following Elon Musk's announcement of Optimus sales by 2027, Tesla's humanoid robot has started an apprenticeship at its Austin factory, learning complex tasks from camera-equipped trainers amid CES 2026 robotics advances. Deployment in factories is targeted by end-2026.

In its Q4 2025 earnings call, Tesla announced plans to repurpose Model S and X assembly lines at Fremont for 1 million Optimus 3 units annually and ramp high-volume Optimus V4 production at Giga Texas. CEO Elon Musk highlighted the robot's learning capabilities via observation and video, upcoming Gen 3 unveiling, and challenges like scaling amid Chinese competition, backed by $20 billion in 2026 capex.

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Tesla's shares fell more than 3.5 percent in early trading on Monday following the Department of Justice's release of files detailing communications between Elon Musk and Jeffrey Epstein. The documents contradict Musk's earlier denials of interest in visiting Epstein's island. Despite some sales upticks in Europe, the company's stock has faced pressure amid ongoing controversies.

 

 

 

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