Seems odd to gate it by model rather than by charging requirements. If this is a matter of the station verifying the vehicle type through the port, why was the CCS data protocol even designed such that it can be misused in this way?
The only exchanges that should be going on are voltage requirements, amperage requirements, maybe SoC, and maybe a secure payment ID. The station shouldn't be given the opportunity to care about anything else.
I am glad the stations are being opened up, regardless.
37 EV models, some of which are the most popular electric vehicles in the world's largest car market, will gain access to Tesla's Supercharger network, much to the chagrin of current Tesla EV owners in China. Electric vehicles from Tesla's frenemy BYD, as well as NIO, XPeng, Polestar, and others, will be able to top up at Tesla Superchargers.