The Phnom Penh Post

Tesla begins production of mass-market Model 3

Taiwan firm thinks local base could add flavour

- Julie Charpentra­t Kali Kotoski

TESLA has begun delivering on a dream to make an electric car for the masses, rolling out its Model 3, aiming to disrupt a world accustomed to automobile­s powered by pollutions­pewing fossil fuel.

An initial batch of the Model 3 cars that rolled out of the Tesla plant in Fremont, California, late on Friday were given to customers, most of whom were employees of the company.

Tesla founder and Chief Executive Elon Musk proclaimed it a great day for the company, saying the goal was to make a terrific electric car “that everyone can buy”.

Musk starred in a delivery ceremony at the plant, driving onto an outdoor stage in a red Model 3.

“It’s the best car for its cost, either electric or gasoline,” he said.

Production of the electric car aimed at the broader market – with a starting price of $35,000 – will ramp up quickly, according to Musk, with 100 in August and 1,500 or more in September. Tesla aims to produce 5,000 units of the Model 3 a week this year, and 10,000 units a week in 2018.

“Welcome to production hell,” Musk quipped to the enthusiast­ic crowd of workers at the event. “That is where we are for at least six months.”

He stressed that there are thousands of parts from suppliers around the world that come together to make each car, and that production could stumble if any component is delayed.

Anyone ordering a Model 3 now was advised not to expect delivery until late next year.

Musk has mentioned in Tesla earnings calls that while early models were packed with innovative engineerin­g, they caused vexation on the assembly line.

The Model 3, he said, was designed from the outset with mass production in mind to push down cost and crank cars out quickly.

Tesla already sells “S” and “X” model electric cars, but with a starting price of $80,000, they have been seen as wheels for the wealthy.

The Model 3 silhouette resembles that of the Model S, but the new electric ride is smaller with a simpler design.

The vehicle’s battery was designed to keep it going for 354 kilometres be- fore needing to be recharged, according to Tesla. A battery with a longer range is available for more money.

Musk announced that by the end of next year there will be three times as many “Supercharg­ers” in its network of electricit­y filling stations.

“Anywhere on Earth [where] there is electricit­y, you can charge your car,” Musk said. “The Supercharg­er is just about being able to charge your car really fast.”

‘Crucial step’

More than a half-million customers have placed deposits for the Model 3.

“Demand is not a challenge there,” Musk said, noting that most of the orders have been in the US.

Like its predecesso­rs, the Model 3 is fully electric and on-board computers can handle driving tasks.

“For the future, the future being now, the cars will be increasing­ly autonomous,” Musk said, pointing out that every Tesla model has the hardware needed to drive itself.

“You will be able to watch a movie, talk to friends, go to sleep.”

Tesla referred to the arrival of the Model 3 as a “crucial step” in the company’s mission to speed the transition to renewable energy.

Musk said money made from S and X models is used to make the more affordable Model 3, following through on a plan made early at the company founded in 2003.

Cars powered by green energy are consistent with a concern for the environmen­t seen in Musk’s other enterprise­s. Musk runs solar energy firm SolarCity, and is building rechargeab­le batteries to power homes as well as cars.

His Boring Company is part of a vision for near-supersonic rail travel through low-pressure tubes that he laid out in a Hyperloop white paper he made open to other entreprene­urs.

Even though most major car makers sell electric vehicles, Tesla practicall­y defines the category.

The iPhone of cars?

The rush of preorders allowed Tesla to recently become the biggest US car company in terms of market capitalisa­tion, despite the fact that General Motors (GM) and Ford produce millions of cars per year and Tesla has yet to make a profit.

Some analysts say that with the launch, Tesla may be reshaping the future of the auto industry.

Gene Munster, analyst with the research firm Loup Ventures, argues that Tesla may do for the auto sector what Apple did for smartphone­s.

“We believe we will eventually look back at the launch of the Model 3 and compare it to the iPhone, which proved to be the catalyst for the shift to mobile computing,” Munster said in a recent research note. VEDAN Internatio­nal Holdings, a Hong Kong-listed investment holding company that produces food additives for beverage production, instant noodles and monosodium glutamate (MSG), is looking to set up a subsidiary in Cambodia by the end of the year, according to a report in Taiwanese media.

The Taiwanese company hopes the Cambodian subsidiary would serve as a new base for operations to expand into the Thai and Lao markets, a company executive was quoted as saying on Saturday.

“It is Vedan’s goal to expand the firm’s reach from Vietnam to other Southeast Asian countries in the next few years,” executive director and CEO Yang KunHsiang said.

Currently Vedan has two plants in mainland China and three plants in Vietnam, and claims to hold a 50 percent market share of MSG production in Vietnam. The company’s overall sales last year reached $327.6 million, mostly on sales in China.

Yang said the Asean Free Trade Agreement could significan­tly reduce tax expenses for expansion into the region as the company aggressive­ly plans to increase its presence across Southeast Asia.

“We hope to increase sales contributi­ons from Asean from nearly 20 percent to 35 percent within three years,” Yang said in the report, adding that diversific­ation into Cambodia would help mitigate risk from being over-reliant on the saturated Vietnamese market.

According to its 2016 annual report, Vedan began importing an undisclose­d amount of raw cassava materials from Cambodia for MSG production last year. The company turned gross profit of $79 million last year, a 30.2 percent increase from the previous year.

 ?? PETER HOLLEY/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Tesla Model 3 owners await their cars in Freemont, California, on Friday.
PETER HOLLEY/THE WASHINGTON POST Tesla Model 3 owners await their cars in Freemont, California, on Friday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia