Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tesla CEO visits plant for restart

Possible arson attack halted production

-

GRUENHEIDE, Germany — Tesla CEO Elon Musk visited the electric car maker’s first European plant on Wednesday as production resumed at the factory just outside Berlin, about a week after a suspected arson attack cut its power supply.

Musk was expected at a “team huddle” with employees at the plant in the Gruenheide municipali­ty, employee council chief Michaela Schmitz told regional broadcaste­r RBB’S Inforadio channel. Reporters at the scene could see him arriving from a distance, and he turned their way, shouting “Deutschlan­d rocks” or “Germany rocks.”

Production at Tesla’s plant in Gruenheide came to a standstill on Tuesday last week. Tens of thousands of residents, nearby hospitals, nursing homes and a big logistics center for a German grocery chain were also affected.

The electricit­y supply to the plant was restored on Monday evening. Schmitz said that, after machines were checked and started up, “the early shift can begin (work) again this morning.”

“People are glad to be able to come back to work,” she added.

Authoritie­s in the state of Brandenbur­g, where the plant is located, have said they suspect that someone deliberate­ly set fire to a high-voltage transmissi­on line on an electricit­y pylon.

A far-left organizati­on calling itself the Volcano Group said it was behind the fire, accusing Tesla of “extreme exploitati­on conditions” and calling for the “complete destructio­n of the gigafactor­y.” The German federal prosecutor’s office took over the investigat­ion, citing an initial suspicion that a terrorist organizati­on might have been involved in the attack.

Tesla opened the factory in March 2022, launching a challenge to German automakers on their home turf.

The power outage came as environmen­tal activists have been protesting in a forest near the plant against plans to expand the facility.

The company wants to add a freight depot, warehouses and a kindergart­en. The plans would entail felling more than 247 acres of forest. That has drawn opposition from environmen­talists and some other local groups, who also worry about possible effects on the area’s water supply.

Asked by reporters from a distance whether he was still planning to expand the Tesla factory in Berlin, Musk answered, “Absolutely.”

About 12,500 people work at the plant.

 ?? Ebrahim Noroozi The Associated Press ?? Tesla CEO Elon Musk, fourth from right, arrives on Wednesday at the Tesla Gigafactor­y for electric cars, Tesla’s first European plant, in Gruenheide, Germany, near Berlin.
Ebrahim Noroozi The Associated Press Tesla CEO Elon Musk, fourth from right, arrives on Wednesday at the Tesla Gigafactor­y for electric cars, Tesla’s first European plant, in Gruenheide, Germany, near Berlin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States