Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Tesla makes deal for factory in Shanghai

-

The Associated Press

BEIJING — Electric car producer Tesla will build its first factory outside the United States in Shanghai’s ultra-modern Pudong district under an agreement signed Tuesday, becoming the first wholly foreign-owned automaker in China.

Tesla Inc.’s announceme­nt comes amid mounting U.S.Chinese tension over technology and follows Beijing’s April promise to end restrictio­ns that required foreign automakers to work through local partners.

Taking its biggest step yet into an overseas market, Tesla said constructi­on would begin in the near future, once official permits are obtained. It said production would begin two to three years after that and eventually increase to 500,000 vehicles annually.

No financial details were announced. A city government statement said the factory would be the biggest foreign investment to date in Shanghai, a base for joint ventures between General Motors Co. and Volkswagen AG and a state-owned automaker.

The signing ceremony was attended by Tesla chairman Elon Musk, Mayor Ying Yong and other Chinese officials, according to the city government.

China is the world’s biggest electric vehicle market but Tesla and other producers including GM and Nissan Motor Co. had been reluctant to transfer manufactur­ing to this country due to the requiremen­t to share technology with Chinese partners that might become rivals.

Tesla began selling cars in China in 2014, shipping them from its California factory, which added a 15 percent import duty to the price. Despite that, China quickly became its No. 2 market after the United States.

“Tesla is deeply committed to the Chinese market,” the company said in a statement.

Tesla is among companies hit by additional 25 percent import duties imposed by Beijing in retaliatio­n for a tariff hike by President Donald Trump in a dispute over technology policy.

Tesla follows HarleyDavi­dson in charting plans to expand outside the U.S. to circumvent tariffs under Mr. Trump’s escalating trade disputes. While the motorcycle maker’s shares have slumped amid attacks by the president, Mr. Musk’s plans have so far avoided controvers­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States