Benjamin Bate, Tesla’s Director of Vehicle Operations and Engineering at Fremont, has left the automaker after over 8 years to become a plant manager at Chemelex.
Bate’s departure, which we spotted on his LinkedIn profile, adds to the now-constant stream of experienced talent leaving Tesla.
He spent just over 8 years at the automaker, working his way up from Maintenance and Controls Manager for paint operations in January 2018 to eventually becoming Director of Vehicle Operations and Engineering at Fremont in August 2023.
Before Tesla, Bate worked at Ford for nearly two years as a Manufacturing Engineering Manager in Paint operations in Kansas City.
At Tesla, he held several key roles:
- Maintenance and Controls Manager – Paint (Jan 2018 – Aug 2019)
- Senior Manufacturing Manager – Paint Operations (Aug 2019 – Apr 2020)
- Senior Manager – General Assembly Operations (Apr 2020 – Dec 2020)
- Director of Manufacturing – Model 3 and Model Y (Dec 2020 – Aug 2023)
- Director, Vehicle Operations and Engineering (Aug 2023 – Jan 2026)
That last role is significant. As Director of Manufacturing for Model 3 and Model Y, Bate oversaw production of Tesla’s two best-selling vehicles at its most important factory for nearly three years.
He has now joined Chemelex, a Redwood City-based company that specializes in electric thermal and sensing solutions, as Plant Manager. It’s a notable shift from EV manufacturing to industrial equipment.
The departure is another data point in what has become an alarming trend at Tesla.
Over the past two years, the automaker has lost a staggering number of experienced executives and senior managers. Drew Baglino, the 18-year veteran who led powertrain and energy engineering, left in April 2024. The Model Y program manager Emmanuel Lamacchia and Cybertruck program head Siddhant Awasthi both announced their departures on the same day in November 2025. Omead Afshar, one of Musk’s closest lieutenants who oversaw sales and manufacturing in North America and Europe, left in mid-2025.
And those are just the high-profile names. Tesla also lost its long-time head of software David Lau, two of its top car designers, its top crash safety architect, its head of North American sales, and the director behind Tesla Energy products. Countless directors, senior managers, and engineers have quietly updated their LinkedIn profiles over the past year.
At some point, you have to wonder: who’s actually left to build the cars?
Electrek’s Take
What car? Tesla is betting everything on robotaxis and Optimus robots now. Elon Musk has made it clear he doesn’t care much about vehicle sales anymore. But someone still needs to run the factories that generate the cash to fund those AI dreams. People like Benjamin Bate.
Manufacturing expertise takes years to build. It can be hard to replace an 8-year veteran who knows every inch of the Fremont paint shop and general assembly line with a fresh college hire, a strategy Tesla has pursued in recent years.
Top comment by Steve Peterson
Tesla gave up on automobiles years ago. The Cybertruck has been a complete failure (an order of magnitude below Musk's predictions), and it's because of both a bad design and bad engineering (10+ recalls speaks to both issues). Meanwhile, have there been any advances to their existing cars aside from minor cosmetic touches? No. While competitiors are bringing solid state batteries ever closer to mass production, Tesla doesn't even seem to be working on that any more. There were hints Tesla was going to improve the manufacturing process and save a lot of money per car -- but if they really had such innovation. you'd think the logical thing to do would be to re-engineer their current vehicles to take advantage of this. Imagine if they could cut the cost of each car by 25% and make even more per unit; wouldn't that be worth time and effort? And there's been no effort to try and repair the brand damage Musk has caused, though to be fair that is likely beyond repair as long as he keeps posting. So it's not surprising top talent is leaving -- especially if their stock options aren't going to be worth much, and as insiders they would have a better picture of that than anyone else. I think the whole shell game is past due for collapse.
We previously reported that Tesla is bleeding talent at the top and is not necessarily actively seeking to hire veterans to replace them. It prefers to recruit young people, often straight from college, which is a lot cheaper.
This institutional knowledge walking out the door, it matters. As we’ve reported, Tesla has a serious employee morale problem that doesn’t seem to be getting any better.
I recently spoke with someone who has great insights into Tesla and its engineers, and he brought up an interesting point: regardless of Musk’s toxic brand, one of the main reasons top engineers are leaving is that they are bored.
To retain talent, you need to keep them interested, and since Musk has shifted Tesla entirely toward autonomy and robots, the cars themselves haven’t gotten much attention. Tesla is no longer innovating or pushing the envelope in automobiles. This has to be quite boring.
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