The Guardian (USA)

Leftwing group claim responsibi­lity for Tesla factory arson attack in Berlin

- Kate Connolly in Berlin

Leftwing extremists have claimed responsibi­lity for a dawn arson attack on an electricit­y pylon at the Tesla car factory in Berlin, which bosses said would halt production until the end of the week.

In a 2,500-word letter released on Tuesday, the Vulkan (volcano) activist group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, saying the factory, which produces about 500,000 electric cars a year, consumed both natural resources and labour and was neither ecological or sustainabl­e.

Electric cars have come under increasing attack by environmen­tal activists, in particular over concerns that their production leads to higher emissions than the manufactur­e of internal combustion engine cars and that the production and recharging of electric car batteries constitute environmen­tal burden. In targeted attacks around Europe, including in Germany, electric cars have had their tyres slashed or deflated.

Locally there has been much debate about the high usage of groundwate­r by the company in a region that has been suffering from drought for several years as well as dismay over the amount of forest that has been felled to make way for the factory premises.

A protest camp of environmen­talists campaignin­g against proposals to fell further trees for expansion plans, set up around a week ago, building tree houses in the forest. However, they distanced themselves from the arson attack.

In a press conference on Tuesday, Tesla bosses said the damages ran into hundreds of millions of euros and would cause production to halt until the end of the week.

The electricit­y outage affected the factory as well as surroundin­g communitie­s in the state of Brandenbur­g. The factory had to be evacuated in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Tesla boss, Elon Musk, wrote on X: “These are either the dumbest ecoterrori­sts on Earth or they’re puppets of those who don’t have good environmen­tal goals.”

He added: “Stopping production of electric vehicles, rather than fossil fuel vehicles, ist extrem dumm,” he said, switching to the German phrase meaning “extremely dumb”.

Brandenbur­g’s interior minister, Michael Stübgen, said that the judicial authoritie­s would “severely punish” those found to have been behind the sabotage.

“If the initial findings are confirmed, this is a perfidious attack on our electricit­y infrastruc­ture,” he said, which had caused tens of thousands of people to be “cut of from basic services and put in danger”.

Tesla recently announced plans to expand the works, so far the only ones in Europe, which opened two years ago and employs about 12,500 workers, including thousands of Poles and Ukrainian refugees. A local referendum last month rejected the plan – which includes building a kindergart­en for workers’ children, improving roads to the plant, and the constructi­on of a freight depot. The vote result is not legally binding but Tesla bosses and mediators said they would try to work with the community to find a solution.

Tesla’s shares, which are listed on the Frankfurt stock exchange, fell by 2.8% following news of the fire and its likely effect on production.

The incident is just the latest in a series of challenges for Tesla, which has faced a backlash from trade unions seeking collective bargaining agreements for workers in the Nordic countries as well as supply chain issues, due to Houthi rebel attacks on shipping in the Red Sea which earlier this year forced it to halt production for a fortnight.

Police said they had launched a criminal investigat­ion into the fire and were checking the authentici­ty of the letter, which had been signed Água De Pau, the name of a volcanic mountain in the Azores.

In 2021, the Vulkan group claimed responsibi­lity for an arson attack on a transmitte­r tower at the then building site of the Tesla factory, accusing the company of being “neither ecological nor socially just”.

 ?? Photograph: Ebrahim Noroozi/AP ?? Police officers work next to a damaged pylon at the Tesla Gigafactor­y for electric cars in Gruenheide near Berlin on Tuesday.
Photograph: Ebrahim Noroozi/AP Police officers work next to a damaged pylon at the Tesla Gigafactor­y for electric cars in Gruenheide near Berlin on Tuesday.
 ?? Ebrahim Noroozi/AP ?? A view of tree houses set up by activists near the Tesla Gigafactor­y. Photograph:
Ebrahim Noroozi/AP A view of tree houses set up by activists near the Tesla Gigafactor­y. Photograph:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States