Global Times - Weekend

Tesla delayed telling regulators about crash

Electric carmaker waited 9 days before disclosing autopilot fatality

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Tesla Motors alerted regulators to a fatality in one of its electric cars in partial self-driving Autopilot mode nine days after it crashed, the company said on Tuesday, defending its decision not to make the accident public before a federal investigat­ion was announced.

Tesla learned about the crash of the Model S sedan in Florida “shortly” after it occurred on May 7 . On May 16 it disclosed the incident to the government.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion (NHTSA) on June 30 announced a probe.

The news comes as the company faces pressure on several fronts. Its bid to buy rooftop solar power company Solar City has been questioned by investors, and over the US July 4 holiday weekend, it disclosed that second-quarter vehicle production missed company targets.

Autopilot is one of the most advanced and most promoted Tesla technologi­es and is still in beta or test mode.

That has spurred questions – including in an article by Fortune magazine – over whether the company and regulators should have informed the public earlier of the fatality.

On Tuesday, Chief Executive Elon Musk tweeted in response to the article about the timing of the disclosure that the May fatality “wasn’t material” to Tesla.

Tesla raised at least $1.46 billion from investors on May 18-19 with a stock offering, as the Autopilot investigat­ion was unfolding.

The company knew of the crash by the time of the capital raising. But its own investigat­ion was not yet complete and it had not yet been informed by the government of its probe, according to a timeline described by a Tesla spokeswoma­n.

The windshield was ripped off the Model S after it plowed into the side of a truck on a divided highway, and the damage meant the car was unable to transmit data to Tesla.

Tesla learned of the accident “shortly thereafter” from local authoritie­s, the spokeswoma­n said.

The company was obligated to disclose the fatality to regulators during its third quarter but notified them earlier, on May 16, as it was investigat­ing.

“Tesla then provided NHTSA with additional details about the accident over the following weeks as it worked to complete its investigat­ion, which it ultimately concluded during the last week of May,” the spokeswoma­n said.

An investigat­ion of the crash has not yet establishe­d if the driver was distracted, or if his hands were on the wheel.

Tesla Motors Inc Chief Executive Elon Musk told reporters last year that its partial self-driving technology was “hands on.” When Autopilot is activated, the driver hears a chime and sees an indication on the dashboard telling them to “please keep your hands on the wheel. Be prepared to take over at any time.”

NHTSA spokesman Bryan Thomas said the investigat­ion was “active” and the agency would not comment further.

Asked why the company did not disclose the incident ahead of the share sale and ahead of its recently announced bid to acquire Solar City, Tesla issued the following statement:

“Tesla does not find it necessary, nor does any automaker, to share the details of every accident that occur in a Tesla vehicle. More than a million people die globally every year in car accidents, but automakers do not disclose each of these accidents to investors, let alone before those investigat­ions are complete and without regard to what the results of those investigat­ions end up being.”

Tesla shares fell as much as 4 percent on the first trading day after the accident was disclosed, but then ended the day up 2 percent.

The spokeswoma­n said the reaction showed investors agreed with the company. “The market apparently understand­s this,” she said.

Tesla shares have swung widely this year and are down about 11 percent so far. The stock dived on news of Tesla’s Solar City bid, falling more than the value of its offer.

Its shares ended down 1.16 percent on Tuesday, the first trading day after the company disclosed the production shortfall.

Peter Henning, a law professor at Wayne State University in Detroit, said Tesla probably should have informed investors of the crash before its stock offering and Solar City offer.

“The materialit­y issue is not about the death itself, but more about the circumstan­ces of the crash and calling into question a technology that’s important to Tesla’s future,” Henning said.

“Those are issues that investors want to know, so you could make a reasonable argument that it crossed the (materialit­y) line. When it’s that close, the (US) Securities and Exchange Commission expects disclosure.”

 ??  ?? Tesla vehicles sit parked outside a new Tesla showroom and service center in New York on Tuesday.
Tesla vehicles sit parked outside a new Tesla showroom and service center in New York on Tuesday.

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