The Prague Post - Tesla awaits green light to start production at German plant

EUR -
AED 4.314042
AFN 75.770252
ALL 95.711219
AMD 441.351736
ANG 2.102555
AOA 1078.363762
ARS 1599.52384
AUD 1.646108
AWG 2.115906
AZN 1.998213
BAM 1.956029
BBD 2.375778
BDT 145.027
BGN 1.959499
BHD 0.445352
BIF 3507.411141
BMD 1.174688
BND 1.501176
BOB 8.150955
BRL 5.885421
BSD 1.179638
BTN 109.463831
BWP 15.826855
BYN 3.350393
BYR 23023.878873
BZD 2.372378
CAD 1.609798
CDF 2713.528572
CHF 0.920156
CLF 0.026588
CLP 1046.435987
CNY 8.008727
CNH 8.016092
COP 4235.747634
CRC 537.96306
CUC 1.174688
CUP 31.129224
CVE 110.277927
CZK 24.285961
DJF 210.054623
DKK 7.473034
DOP 70.71829
DZD 156.219312
EGP 61.090691
ERN 17.620315
ETB 184.18309
FJD 2.605804
FKP 0.868621
GBP 0.871166
GEL 3.178253
GGP 0.868621
GHS 13.034528
GIP 0.868621
GMD 86.332552
GNF 10349.213141
GTQ 9.021057
GYD 246.788929
HKD 9.19892
HNL 31.341674
HRK 7.539024
HTG 154.468107
HUF 362.387042
IDR 20134.147137
ILS 3.476829
IMP 0.868621
INR 108.78025
IQD 1545.281139
IRR 1552349.792126
ISK 143.465183
JEP 0.868621
JMD 186.501862
JOD 0.832867
JPY 186.990328
KES 151.922567
KGS 102.727058
KHR 4718.553112
KMF 491.019762
KPW 1057.209717
KRW 1735.368917
KWD 0.362227
KYD 0.983015
KZT 553.104835
LAK 26025.050672
LBP 105632.082256
LKR 372.863707
LRD 217.045442
LSL 19.333866
LTL 3.468547
LVL 0.710557
LYD 7.458874
MAD 10.883376
MDL 20.277377
MGA 4892.57351
MKD 61.647226
MMK 2466.171243
MNT 4198.948525
MOP 9.515115
MRU 47.148527
MUR 54.376866
MVR 18.160654
MWK 2045.439768
MXN 20.404947
MYR 4.645883
MZN 75.127174
NAD 19.333866
NGN 1582.304393
NIO 43.405088
NOK 11.024397
NPR 175.14253
NZD 2.000875
OMR 0.454133
PAB 1.179638
PEN 4.058276
PGK 5.113599
PHP 69.969095
PKR 328.898654
PLN 4.231912
PYG 7514.880899
QAR 4.300504
RON 5.095793
RSD 117.363757
RUB 89.653259
RWF 1723.602042
SAR 4.406491
SBD 9.439376
SCR 17.633236
SDG 705.987416
SEK 10.799621
SGD 1.495671
SHP 0.877023
SLE 28.926663
SLL 24632.609171
SOS 674.179028
SRD 44.292748
STD 24313.663655
STN 24.502872
SVC 10.32121
SYP 129.858763
SZL 19.328266
THB 37.742552
TJS 11.123504
TMT 4.11728
TND 3.423501
TOP 2.828366
TRY 52.694966
TTD 8.011939
TWD 36.978975
TZS 3061.058793
UAH 51.930587
UGX 4368.51208
USD 1.174688
UYU 46.925501
UZS 14314.677975
VES 563.447136
VND 30935.400516
VUV 137.427213
WST 3.189496
XAF 656.033901
XAG 0.014879
XAU 0.000247
XCD 3.174653
XCG 2.125949
XDR 0.815896
XOF 656.033901
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.284679
ZAR 19.294187
ZMK 10573.594334
ZMW 22.441631
ZWL 378.248959
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    13.09

    +1.38%

  • CMSD

    0.1800

    23.08

    +0.78%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    22.77

    +0.66%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    24.09

    -0.29%

  • GSK

    1.2200

    58.35

    +2.09%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    100.15

    +0.44%

  • NGG

    -0.6000

    86.92

    -0.69%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    36.68

    +1.28%

  • BCC

    4.2400

    83.04

    +5.11%

  • BTI

    0.5400

    56.68

    +0.95%

  • AZN

    4.3300

    204.8

    +2.11%

  • VOD

    -0.2200

    15.48

    -1.42%

  • BP

    -3.0400

    44.59

    -6.82%

  • RYCEF

    0.5600

    17.66

    +3.17%

Tesla awaits green light to start production at German plant
Tesla awaits green light to start production at German plant

Tesla awaits green light to start production at German plant

After a series of administrative delays, US electric car pioneer Tesla is on the verge of receiving the go-ahead from German authorities on Friday to begin production at its "giga-factory" outside Berlin.

Text size:

Officials in the eastern state of Brandenburg, where the factory is located, look set to confirm their approval at a press conference in Potsdam at 3:30 pm (1430 GMT), according to local reports.

The plant, in Grueneheide, to the southeast of Berlin, is slated to produce 500,000 vehicles a year.

Announced with much fanfare in November 2019, the project was warmly received by politicians in a country proud of its car-making tradition.

Elon Musk's Tesla benefited from an expedited preliminary approval process, allowing it to begin construction before receiving the final planning permission.

But the American manufacturer's early momentum was broken by a series of legal and administrative difficulties, in part prompted by angry locals with concerns over the environmental impact of the site.

- Protected lizards -

Together with national NGOs Nabu and Gruene Liga, residents did everything to stand in the way of the project, organising protests, making court appeals and writing open letters.

In 2020, courts ordered Tesla to stop work at the site after a complaint by local associations fearing the destruction of the habitat of endangered lizards and snakes.

The plant's massive demand for water was also a sore point for residents in an area that has been hit by summer droughts in the last three years.

On Friday, judges could also hand down a decision in a case brought against the local administration, which plans to pump out more water to use at the plant.

Under pressure from environmentalists, authorities were careful to examine the case closely, delaying the arrival of planning permission.

Setbacks also gave Tesla the opportunity to amend its application, adding a massive yet-to-be-built battery plant next to the main factory.

Concerns over the build were dismissed by Tesla's rockstar CEO Musk, who sought to win over locals by hosting a country fair on the factory grounds in October.

Thousands were in attendance at the event, where Musk declared his intention to begin production in November or December of this year.

The earlier target may have been achieved were it not for the extension of a public consultation deadline from mid-October to the end of November due to an administrative error.

"Seriously??!!" was the tweet Musk sent in response to the new delay, having already voiced his frustration at Germany's slow bureaucratic processes on several occasions.

- Works council -

Had approval for the plant not been given, the costs for dismantling the work that had been done would have fallen on Tesla.

Production at the factory should begin almost immediately with Tesla having already made a "limited" number of vehicles in a test, a spokesman told AFP.

Tesla's next challenge is to find workers, while businesses in Germany are contending with shortages of skilled labour.

What employees there are at the factory have seen to the organisation of a works council, against the American carmaker's protestations.

The shop-floor organisation is common to German industries, and hands workers a degree of influence over corporate decision-making.

Elections to the works council, which took place at the end of February, were nonetheless won by representatives of "Gigavoice", which is closer to management.

Currently between 2,500 and 3,000 people work at the plant, according to union sources, primarily more senior members of staff.

In time, the figure should rise to 12,000, according to local press reports, a figure which has not been confirmed by Tesla.

A.Stransky--TPP