Oh, and 10 tonnes is bus-sized. For infrastructure at that scale, you want trains at the very least, and those are on the order of 1,000 tonnes. Multiply force, power, and current by 100 accordingly.
The current method to get 10 tons to low orbit is to burn chemical fuel at a thermal power output of around a gigawatt. This consumes something like 20 times the mass of the payload as propellant, and only barely avoids catastrophic failure 95% of the time. GEO is harder.
From what I've seen nobody currently directly launches more than 4.9 tons direct to GEO (Vulcan Centaur VC4). Starship is supposed do 27 to GTO (not GEO) when finished, but it's not finished.
If a space elevator lasts long enough to amortise the construction costs (nobody knows, what with them not being buildable yet), they would represent an improvement on launch costs relative to current methods, even if you were limited to 10 tons at a time and each GEO being a 2 hour trip.