Calgary Herald

Tesla ‘on its way out of production hell,’ Musk tells CBS

- CRAIG TRUDELL

Don’t call Tesla Inc.’s slower-than-anticipate­d deliveries of Model 3 sedans a delay. It’s merely been a “time shift,” according to Elon Musk.

“You’ll definitely get your car,” the chief executive officer told CBS in an interview aired Thursday. “It’s a six- to nine-month time shift. That’s literally it, and three of those months have already passed.”

Musk has tested some customers’ and investors’ patience by struggling to resolve bottleneck­s causing what he’s described as “production hell.”

The period of manufactur­ing woes is lasting about two to three quarters longer than he thought, he said.

The comments by Musk, 46, were somewhat inconsiste­nt with Tesla’s statement earlier this month, in which the company said Model 3 may exceed the growth rate that Ford Motor Co. exhibited with the Model T.

Tesla shares fell as much as 1.7 per cent to US$296.08 as of 9:55 a.m. in New York. It closed at US$294.08 Thursday, down 2.28 per cent.

To be sure, Musk also reiterated that the company was making progress.

“As long as you can see that you’re ascending levels of hell, that’s OK,” he told CBS. “Then at least that gives you hope. And I think we’re rapidly — Tesla’s rapidly on its way out of production hell.”

Asked by CBS This Morning co-host Gayle King if Model 3 depositors were cancelling their reservatio­ns, Musk said that some had. “It’s mostly, like, people cancel because, you know, they just needed a car and we didn’t have a car for them,” he said.

As of the end of 2017, Tesla reported more than US$850 million in customer deposits, including for the Model 3.

Tesla delivered 8,180 Model 3s in the first three months of the year, missing analysts’ average estimate for about 8,800 units.

The company built 2,020 of the sedans in the seven days leading up to April 3, below its target for a 2,500unit rate in the final week of March.

The company has said the production rate for Model 3 will increase through the second quarter and that it will make 5,000 units a week in about three months.

Musk reiterated that he’s again sleeping on the factory floor, as he did in 2016 when Tesla was struggling to produce the Model X crossover.

The billionair­e said he’s doing this “not because I think that’s a fun place to sleep. I don’t believe like people should be experienci­ng hardship while the CEO is like off on vacation.”

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Elon Musk

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