New Tesla factories losing billions of dollars,
Musk says
By
Annabelle Liang
Business
reporter
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-61905276
Elon Musk says
Tesla's new factories in Germany and the US are "losing billions of
dollars" due to battery shortages and supply disruptions in China.
The
multi-billionaire also called the plants in Berlin and Austin, Texas
"gigantic money furnaces".
Covid-19
lockdowns in China this year, including in Shanghai where Tesla has a huge
factory, have made it increasingly difficult for manufacturers to operate.
In recent
weeks Mr Musk has been warning of job cuts at the firm.
"Both
Berlin and Austin factories are gigantic money furnaces right now. It's really
like a giant roaring sound, which is the sound of money on fire," said Mr
Musk, who is the electric vehicle maker's chief executive.
The plants
are "losing billions of dollars right now. There's a ton of expense and
hardly any output," he added in an interview with the Tesla Owners of
Silicon Valley, a company-recognised club.
Mr Musk
said the so-called gigafactories have been struggling to increase production
since they were opened earlier this year.
Tesla's
site in Austin currently produces a "tiny" number of cars, partly
because some components for its batteries were "stuck" at a Chinese
port "with no one to actually move it", he said.
"This
is all going to get fixed real fast but it requires a lot of attention,"
Mr Musk added.
The
interview was recorded at the end of last month but this part of the
conversation was only posted on Wednesday.
Authorities
in China locked down a number of its cities earlier this year in response to a
surge in Covid-19 infections.
Tough
restrictions were imposed on the movement of people and materials including in
the financial, manufacturing and shipping hub of Shanghai.
Mr Musk
said the shutdown of Shanghai was "very, very difficult" for Tesla,
which reportedly halted most of its production at its 'gigafactory' in the city
for weeks.
The site
will largely be closed again for two weeks next month for upgrading works,
according to the Reuters news agency, which cited an internal memo.
This is
aimed at boosting the site's output, bringing it closer to the company's goal
of the plant producing 22,000 cars every week, the report said.
Tesla did
not immediately respond to a BBC request for comment.
Last week,
the company raised the price of its whole range of cars in the US by almost 5%,
as the cost of raw materials including aluminium and lithium rose.
This week,
Mr Musk said Tesla planned to shed 3.5% of its global workforce after earlier
saying that he had a "super bad feeling" about the economy.
Meanwhile,
German carmaker BMW said on Thursday that it had formally begun production at
its new $2.2bn (£1.8bn) facility in the northeastern Chinese city of Shenyang.
BMW said
the plant, which is its third in China, will increase its annual output in the
country from 700,000 to 830,000.
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