About 2 months after a Tesla Model S spontaneously combusted in a Shanghai parking garage, Tesla is finally admitting that the incident was caused by a "single battery module malfunction," according to Bloomberg.

The company says the conclusion was based on an evaluation by experts from China and the U.S.

Tesla says it didn't find a "systematic flaw" after its investigation into the car's battery, software and manufacturing data (other than the car catching fire, unprovoked, randomly?)

Previously, Tesla had disputed the findings of a preliminary investigation that concluded that the fire was caused by a short circuit in the batter.

We were the first media outlet to single out the fire's appearance on Twitter when we wrote about it in late April, beating out CNBC, among other financial networks and media outlets. A deluge of mainstream media reports and coverage followed hours later, with many in the mainstream media - including CNBC's Phil Lebeau - questioning whether or not the video was even real. Well Phil, now we know. It was as real as it gets, and Tesla has admitted the battery was at fault.

A self proclaimed Tesla owner in Shanghai that Tweets under the name @ShanghaiJayIn posted the video on his Twitter in late April. It showed a Tesla Model S, 1st generation, catching fire spontaneously and becoming fully engulfed in flames in a Chinese parking garage.

The user has since deleted the video of the fire, though it is still mirrored elsewhere.

Tesla is investigating after footage from China appears to show a parked Model S catch on fire.



At least 14 Tesla cars have caught on fire since 2013. pic.twitter.com/yg5xXdDcM9 — Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) April 23, 2019

The video shows what appears to be security footage of a white Tesla that starts with smoke pouring out of the bottom of it. As people can be heard in the background talking in Mandarin, the car simply spontaneously combusts.