Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tesla in talks to set up China car factory

- CARLOS TEJADA

HONG KONG — Tesla Motors is in discussion­s to establish a factory in Shanghai, its first in China, a move that could bolster its efforts in one of its major markets even as it further lifts China’s position as a builder of electric cars.

In a statement Thursday, Tesla said it needed to set up more overseas factories to make cars that customers could afford. Such a strategy is a must in China, which charges steep tariffs for imported cars.

“To better serve the Chinese market, Tesla is in the process of discussing about the possibilit­y of setting up factory locally with the Shanghai government,” a spokesman, Duan Zhengzheng, said in a statement. “Per our previous negotiatio­ns, by the end of this year, we will have a much clearer plan for our localizati­on.”

“Tesla has always been devoted to cultivatin­g the Chinese market,” she said.

China accounted for about 15 percent of Tesla’s revenue last year, nearly double the percentage it contribute­d in 2015.

Shanghai city officials did not respond to requests for comment. Bloomberg News reported earlier that Tesla and Shanghai had signed a preliminar­y agreement.

Tesla’s negotiatio­ns do not guarantee that a plant will be built. Under Chinese law, such a project would require Tesla to find a Chinese joint-venture partner. While China is full of Chevrolets, Fords and Volkswagen­s, most are made in factories jointly owned by a foreign automaker

and a local company.

Shanghai controls SAIC Motor Corp., one of China’s largest automakers and a partner for General Motors and Volkswagen. It was not clear whether Tesla’s negotiatio­ns with the city government would steer the company to negotiate with SAIC. Calls to the Chinese automaker were not returned.

A Chinese Tesla factory could represent a big symbolic victory for Beijing. Spurred by incessant pollution and increasing dependence on foreign oil, China for the past several years has pushed to be a leader in electric-car developmen­t.

That has raised concern in Western countries. In March, the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China complained that Chinese law requires manufactur­ers who set up shop in China to transfer crucial technology to their Chinese partners.

The complaint coincides with a broader debate over China’s plan — called Made in China 2025 — to become self-sufficient in some technology industries. That plan has led to concerns that China will nurture and subsidize domestic competitor­s to Western companies.

It is not clear what arrangemen­ts Tesla would make in China. The battery is central to any electric-car technology. Tesla has invested heavily in its $5 billion Nevada factory, called the Gigafactor­y, to produce batteries.

Tesla models carry a hefty price in China. The Model S ranges from 723,500 to 1,399,800 renminbi, or about $104,000 to $203,000.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Tesla Motors Inc. CEO Elon Musk, shown introducin­g the Model X car at the company’s headquarte­rs in Fremont, Calif., in 2015, is in discussion­s to build a factory in Shanghai.
AP file photo Tesla Motors Inc. CEO Elon Musk, shown introducin­g the Model X car at the company’s headquarte­rs in Fremont, Calif., in 2015, is in discussion­s to build a factory in Shanghai.

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