The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Tesla secures Shanghai site for US$2bil China Gigafactor­y

-

BEIJING: Tesla Inc has signed an agreement with the Shanghai government for an 860,000 sq m plot of land to build its first overseas Gigafactor­y, the electric carmaker said in a Chinese social media post.

The land agreement marks a key step towards the firm and its chief executive Elon Musk making cars locally in China for the fast-growing market, even as tariffs imposed by Beijing on US-made goods have caused it to hike prices of its imported models.

Tesla signed a long-anticipate­d deal with Shanghai authoritie­s in July to build its first factory outside the United States, which would double the size of its global manufactur­ing and help lower the price tag of Tesla cars sold in the world’s largest auto market.

“Securing this site in Shanghai, Tesla’s first Gigafactor­y outside of the United States, is an important milestone for what will be our next advanced, sustainabl­y developed manufactur­ing site,” Robin Ren, Tesla’s vice-president of worldwide sales, said in a statement.

Tesla did not give the price tag for the plot, but the Shanghai Bureau of Planning and Land Resources said that a plot of land of 864,885 sq m had been sold at auction at a price of 973 million yuan (US$140.51mil).

Tesla signed a deal with Shanghai authoritie­s in July to open a plant in the Chinese city with an annual capacity of 500,000 cars.

The factory will help tap China’s rapidly growing market for so-called new-energy vehicles (NEVs), a category comprising electric battery cars and plug-in electric hybrid vehicles, even as China’s wider car market cools.

NEV sales were up 54.8% in September and climbed 81.1% in the first nine months of this year to 721,000 vehicles, the country’s top automobile industry associatio­n said last week.

Beijing, however, is reining in subsidies for the sector, concerned about overcapaci­ty and “blind developmen­t,” with many inside the industry expecting a shake-out to hit the wide array of smaller local electric car start-ups.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia