San Diego Union-Tribune

MUSK EXPANDING TESLA’S FREMONT ASSEMBLY PLANT

Applicatio­n for permits undercuts his threats to abandon California

- BY RUSS MITCHELL Mitchell writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Late last year, Elon Musk kissed California goodbye. The Tesla chief executive sold his BelAir mansions and said he had moved to Texas. But while he also threatened to close the electric carmaker’s California factory in Fremont, those threats now look like bluster.

The company recently filed for permits with city officials to turn an assembly line that now runs through an outdoor tent into a permanent structure. That would expand the current plant by 64,000 square feet, though it’s not clear whether it would add to production capacity.

The permit applicatio­n news was first reported by online news publicatio­n Teslarati. While the permit applicatio­n indicates commitment to the site, there is no guarantee that the project will be completed. It’s also not clear whether constructi­on would cut into current production of the Model 3 and Model Y, which now

run through the tent. Tesla also builds Model X and Model S cars in Fremont. Tesla did not respond to requests for comment and does not have a media relations department.

Musk’s threats to leave California carried weight given Tesla’s massive push to increase production elsewhere. It already operates another plant in Shanghai, China, and major new factories are currently under constructi­on in Austin, Texas, and near Berlin.

Musk first threatened to leave Fremont in May, when the plant was ordered closed by Alameda

County health officials as the COVID-19 pandemic began to spread through the U.S. He defied the orders and reopened the plant, inviting officials to have him arrested.

Alameda County’s public health officer at the time, Erica Pan, relented and allowed the plant to remain open. (Pan was later named state epidemiolo­gist.)

Several months later, Musk reiterated his threat of a Fremont closure in an interview with Automotive News. When he announced he personally was ditching California for Texas in December,

shortly followed by announceme­nts that Hewlett-Packard and Oracle were moving headquarte­rs to the Lone Star State, it stoked debate within the tech industry over whether California was sufficient­ly hospitable to business and whether Austin or another city could re-create Silicon Valley’s success with startups.

Still, there’s no sign that Musk is seriously considerin­g relocating Tesla’s Palo Alto headquarte­rs or the Hawthorne headquarte­rs of his rocket company, SpaceX.

It remains to be seen whether Tesla will sell enough vehicles to justify all its new plants. The company sold about 500,000 cars last year out of its Fremont and Shanghai plants. The company has said it’s able to build 500,000 out of the Fremont plant alone.

The Berlin plant has encountere­d numerous delays, even as Tesla’s sales in Europe have declined, dropping 10 percent in 2020, according to Schmidt Automotive Research. The company’s electric car market share in Europe fell from first to third place, behind Volkswagen and Renault.

 ?? DAVID BUTOW LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Elon Musk has said he may close the Tesla plant in Fremont.
DAVID BUTOW LOS ANGELES TIMES Elon Musk has said he may close the Tesla plant in Fremont.

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