The Phnom Penh Post

Shanghai, China helping fuel Tesla’s electric car dreams

- Li Fusheng

TAO LIN, vice-president of Tesla Inc, may have been right when she said the US electric carmaker had made the right choice last year by choosing to build its first overseas plant in Shanghai.

“Thanks to the outstandin­g business environmen­t in Shanghai, many of our innovative ideas have become realities. From what we have achieved, it is a correct choice,” Tao told reporters on Tuesday in Shanghai.

Tesla’s Shanghai story is more than just innovative. The plant broke ground in January last year and started trial production in October in the same year, without CEO Elon Musk pitching a sleeping bag in the factor y to super vise the progress, as he frequently did in the US.

To cap it, the $2 billion plant was around 65 per cent less expensive to build than its Model 3 production system in the US, said Tesla in its thirdquart­er financial statement.

Tao said the plant will soon start production of its Model 3 sedans after it goes through final approval procedures. “They will be world-class,” she said. The initial capacity will be 3,000 cars per week and deliveries would start in the first quarter of next year.

Bookings for the model, with a mileage of 460km, started last Friday at a list price of 355,800 yuan ($50,500). Tesla is also offering two other versions of Model 3 sedans that are imported from the US.

“China is by far the largest market for mid-sized premium sedans. With Model 3 priced on par with gasoline powered midsized sedans, we believe China could become the biggest market for Model 3,” Tesla said in its quarterly financial statement.

The prospects are not limited to the Model 3 alone. Despite a 25 per cent import duty, the country is already the company’s second-largest market, just behind the US and ahead of Norway and the Netherland­s.

Tesla’s third-quarter financial statement shows that its sales revenue in China surged 64 per cent to $669 million in the quarter, while the figure in the US fell 39 per cent to $3.13 billion.

Bloomberg estimated that the US demand will probably cool as federal tax credits for Tesla cars expire, but China’s market for electric cars has remained strong since it overtook the US as the world’s largest new energy vehicle market in 2015.

Statistics from the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers show that their sales totalled 872,000 units in the first three quarters of this year, up 20.8 per cent year-onyear, despite the overall car market declining for 15 months in a row.

Ya l e Z h a n g , ma n a g i n g di rector of Sha ng ha i-based consult ing f ir m Automotive Foresight, said t he arriva l of loca l ised Tesla models is of great signif icance.

The plant sends a clear signal of the country’s intent to further open up its automotive industry to the world and will be the country’s first fully foreign-owned car manufactur­ing facility.

China decided to allow establishm­ent of such units last year in the new energy vehicle sector and plans to allow the same in commercial vehicles and passenger cars by 2020 and 2022.

“China said it and has kept its word,” said Zhang.

He said Tesla will also help improve the competitiv­eness of local new energy vehicle makers by forcing those incompeten­t ones out of business, some of which have been over-reliant on the government’s financial stimuli, and inspire serious and ambitious companies to do a better job.

Ma Fanglie, president of BJEV, China’s most popular electric car brand, said Chinese companies have something to learn from Tesla.

“It is not eligible for subsidies in China but its sales have been impressive. That’s because its products offer great experience­s that draw wows from its customers. We should develop such products as well,” he said at an industry forum earlier this month.

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