Not meaning to wind this into a debate, but a couple of concrete numbers for consideration. As of this moment the average price for electricity in the USA is $.16 per kw/h. So, 1.7 × .16 = $.27 per mile for the Tesla semi. Meanwhile, the national average for diesel right now is $4.89 per gallon. For a large rig managing 8 mpg that calculates to $.61 per mile for fuel. I'll let others decide if that is a significant saving or not.
Also not wanting to get into a debate

but I used $0.25 per kw-hr b/c where I live in NY bc that's about what it costs after including the delivery fees to my house. Delivery fees to an EV charging station are higher.
In NY, our single party state govt 'leaders' have decided that the Climate Action needed to save the world from the evil CO2 molecule (which is a trace level plant growth nutrient btw) is that everyone will switch over their home heating to Electricity (you know, which is primarily coal fired) _after_ shutting down NY's nuclear plants. Don't get me started on just how stupid our state government really is.
So, to summarize, I have no expectation that the cost of electricity where I live in NY will _ever_ decrease. As more and more homes transition from natural gas heat to electrical heat, the cost of electricity is only going to to up. $0.25 per kw-hr is generously low as an estimate.
But don't believe me, here's another source
https://thebluedot.co/how-much-does-it-cost-to-charge-your-ev-at-public-charging-stations/ that includes the delivery fee for charging an EV. (Hint: it's not cheap!)
"The cost of charging an electric car at a public charging station depends on several factors. But to ballpark it, the average cost per kWh is between $0.40 and $0.70, and you get around 3 to 4 miles for every kWh" (this is for a car)
Using those numbers, that's $0.68-$1.19 per mile if the 1.7 kw-hour per mile number is true.
I'm hearing this also from my friends that drive EV's. The once-free charging stations are now charging both the car and their credit cards, and the cost is not _significantly_ less per mile than a small fuel efficient gasoline powered car. Surprise surprise! (sarcasm intended).
Compared to fossil fuel fired....
I'm getting 8.8mpg in my GMC, at $3.20 per gallon national average, that's $0.36 per mile.
GMC diesel conversions report 14mpg or so, at $4.89 per gallon, that's $0.35 per mile.
But I drive a diesel every day and the price difference between gas and diesel at this moment in time is unusually high. It's usually only about 20% more than gas.
I guess the takeaway is, if someone wants to go EV with their GMC it's not going to be based on a financial analysis. Not unless they do what NY is doing and takes away the fossil fuel option through legislation.