China Daily

Tesla to set up plant in Shanghai for EV chargers

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@ chinadaily. com. cn Lu Ping contribute­d to this story.

Tesla Inc is planning to set up a new manufactur­ing facility in Shanghai for making electric vehicle chargers, the US company said in a document submitted to local authoritie­s.

Tesla plans to invest 42 million yuan ($ 6.4 million) in the new charger factory, according to a document published on an environmen­t- related informatio­n disclosure website in Shanghai seen by China Daily.

Spread over an area of 4,841 square meters, the plant, set to be completed by February 2021, will have an annual production capacity of 10,000 chargers, according to the document. The site is located adjacent to the company’s car plant in Lingang Special Area of Shanghai Pilot Free Trade Zone, where its Model 3 vehicles are being massproduc­ed.

In a written statement to China Daily on Thursday, Tesla also said it expects to build and open 650 supercharg­er stations in China, with over 5,000 supercharg­ers covering 250 cities by the end of 2020.

The statement added that it will build a new R& D center near Shanghai’s Gigafactor­y 3 in addition to an existing one in Beijing, to help “comprehens­ively advance Tesla’s localizati­on strategy in China”.

Tesla, on course to deliver its Model Y sport utility vehicles in 2021 in China, currently imports the charging stations from the

United States.

Figures from the Chinese Passenger Car Associatio­n revealed that Tesla sold 12,143 EVs in China in October. It began exporting 7,000 China- made Model 3s last month to Europe.

“( This) is showcasing to the world not only the speed and efficiency of Chinese constructi­on, but also the quality of Chinese manufactur­ing,” Zhu Xiaotong, global vice- president and head of Tesla in China, said during a ceremony in Shanghai.

In an interview with China Daily in May, a Tesla China technology expert said the company is looking to more than double the number of its supercharg­ers in China within this year.

He said the decision to “significan­tly add” supercharg­ers — Tesla’s bespoke charging piles that allow faster charging — aims to appease potential range anxiety for electric vehicle drivers who fail to secure a permanent parking space for charging.

“Now that the locally- manufactur­ed Model 3 becomes more affordable, we anticipate a rise in the number of car owners who don’t have fixed parking spaces for regular vehicle recharging. That’s why we want to drasticall­y increase the number of supercharg­ers,” said the expert who declined to be named.

Tesla’s charging stations in China are mostly located in city centers and along the exits of expressway­s.

The EV maker is also developing shared charging facilities at residentia­l complexes.

A Deloitte projection last year suggested that battery- operated electric vehicles will account for 90 percent of overall EV sales in China in 2030, with a sales volume of more than 17 million vehicles. Around 60 percent of premium battery- powered EV owners said a range of more than 400 kilometers can meet their daily needs. Improved charging infrastruc­ture was highlighte­d among growth drivers, along with government subsidies and improved battery performanc­e, said Zhou Lingkun, Deloitte China’s automotive sector leader.

“Ongoing technologi­cal innovation will drive the creation and adoption of increasing­ly disruptive battery and charging technologi­es,” he said. “For example, China and Japan are cooperatin­g on a fastchargi­ng solution to bring charging time down to 10 minutes or even shorter by 2020.”

China boasts the largest number of electric vehicle charging facilities in the world — over 1.32 million by June, according to the National Energy Administra­tion. It is also looking to add around 600,000 more this year, thanks to a stimulus initiative to boost “new infrastruc­ture” constructi­on, the National Reform and Developmen­t Commission said in April.

 ?? WANG QIMING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? New energy vehicles charging at a Tesla charge station in Changzhou, Jiangsu province.
WANG QIMING / FOR CHINA DAILY New energy vehicles charging at a Tesla charge station in Changzhou, Jiangsu province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong