Cape Times

Tariff war prompts Tesla to plan factory in China, says source

- Yan Zhang

TESLA plans to invest $5 billion (R66bn) building a factory in China as the trade war with the US makes establishi­ng production in the world’s fastest-growing auto market more imperative for the electric-car pioneer, a person familiar with the matter said.

The company is considerin­g raising funds in China to finance at least a portion of the investment for the plant, said the person, who asked not to be identified as the plans are private. Tesla agreed last month to build the factory near Shanghai, and it expects to start producing its new Model 3 vehicle there by 2020, the person said.

Securing a factory in China became more crucial for Tesla after the nation imposed a 25 percent additional tariff on imports of US-made cars in retaliatio­n for President Donald Trump’s levies on $34bn of Chinese goods. China is the world’s biggest market for electric cars and the second-largest market for Tesla, trailing only the US.

The California-based company didn’t respond to an email seeking confirmati­on of the plans, and a spokespers­on for Tesla in China didn’t return phone calls.

China’s ambition to boost annual sales of new-energy vehicles tenfold by 2025 has encouraged hundreds of automakers to produce electric vehicles in the country. Backed by investment­s from local government­s, tech entreprene­urs and venture-capital firms, Chinese EV start-ups are trying to capture the market before Tesla increases its presence.

Tesla didn’t provide details on how much the factory would cost when it announced a preliminar­y agreement with the Shanghai government last month for what is set to be the first production facility in China wholly owned by a foreign carmaker. Analysts at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce estimate that the required investment could be about $10bn, double what Tesla is said to be planning.

Led by billionair­e Elon Musk, Tesla has been burning through billions of dollars as it ramps up production and struggles to become profitable. The company had $2.7bn of cash at the end of the first quarter.

Musk has ruled out the need to sell new shares or bonds this year, insisting that Tesla will be able to fund itself as it manufactur­es more Model 3 sedans.

The company was scheduled to report quarterly earnings yesterday.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Elon Musk has ruled out the need to sell new shares or bonds this year, insisting that Tesla will be able to fund itself as it manufactur­es more Model 3 sedans.
PHOTO: REUTERS Elon Musk has ruled out the need to sell new shares or bonds this year, insisting that Tesla will be able to fund itself as it manufactur­es more Model 3 sedans.

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