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"SHANGHAI -- Elon Musk was welcomed enthusiastically by top Chinese officials this week in a visit that demonstrated Tesla's commitment to the country that it helped push to become a world leader in electric vehicles.
While many American executives are rethinking their relationship with China amid rising geopolitical tensions, Musk took a flurry of meetings and the opportunity to praise the Shanghai factory that Tesla opened more than three years ago, which now accounts for more than half the company's global output.
Musk told staff during a visit Wednesday that the cars made in Shanghai are "not just the most efficient production, but also of the highest quality," according to a video posted on Tesla's Chinese social-media account.
Before flying out of the country on Thursday morning, Musk saw the revamped Model 3 sedan, a yet-to-be-released mass-market version that is being produced on a trial basis in the factory, people familiar with the matter said. Tesla hasn't refreshed its range for a while and is facing greater competition from Chinese rivals.
Musk talked on Tuesday with Robin Zeng, chairman of China-based battery maker Contemporary Amperex Technology, known as CATL, over a 16-course dinner at an upmarket Chinese restaurant in Beijing, people familiar with the matter said. The two executives discussed a potential battery project in the U.S., the people said, though with no firm plans agreed.
Musk's visit drew great interest from internet users in China, where he has celebrity status. Chinese officials used the trip to promote business ties with the U.S., though Beijing has been cracking down on some foreign companies in the name of national security. Authorities have raided due-diligence firms and detained staff, and last month China blacklisted some products from U.S. memory-chip maker Micron Technology.
After China's Foreign Minister Qin Gang met with Musk on Tuesday, the ministry said Musk had told Qin that Tesla was opposed to decoupling the world's two biggest economies. Making an analogy to U.S.-China relations, Qin said one must avoid "dangerous driving." Musk also met China's top auto industry regulator, the commerce minister and Shanghai's Communist Party chief.
Musk and Tesla didn't respond to requests to comment. A Tesla executive reposted the foreign ministry's statement on her Chinese social-media account.
Musk is the latest in a long line of American executives to have visited China this year, with the country saying it is open for business after pandemic border controls were loosened. Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook and Pfizer's Albert Bourla traveled to China earlier this year to meet senior officials and visit local facilities.
Apple is among companies that are seeking to reduce dependence on China amid political uncertainties by diversifying production to countries including India and Vietnam.
Tesla plans new manufacturing plants around the world, but is also doubling down on China, saying in April that it plans to build a second factory in Shanghai to produce its Megapack energy-storage product. Long-mooted plans for another auto manufacturing plant in Shanghai, however, haven't shown any signs of progressing.
Chinese leaders encouraged Tesla to build its first factory, which opened in 2019, to help ignite consumer demand for EVs and provide competition for domestic EV makers that were considered sluggish by Beijing despite years of incentives.
It worked. Exports of Tesla cars from its Shanghai factory to Europe and Asia helped China surpass Japan as the world's largest vehicle exporter in the first quarter of this year. China is the world's largest EV market and is growing rapidly as Tesla's brand appeal helped nudge more consumers to switch from gas-powered cars. A supply chain built around Tesla now feeds a wave of improving homegrown EV makers.
Automotive industry executives who long saw China as a follower of global automotive trends now regard it as a trendsetter in electric cars. Foreign carmakers have acknowledged they need to play catch-up. Both Musk and Ford CEO Jim Farley have said that they regard Chinese companies as their biggest rivals in EVs.
Tesla's benefit to China can be seen through the supply chain it has helped develop. The company has said that its manufacturing in Shanghai had been 95% localized.
By stirring China's EV industry to life, Tesla, with two locally made models, now faces serious challenges from Chinese competitors. Domestic automakers made up 83% of all EVs sold in the country last year, according to the China Passenger Car Association. Tesla's market share has fallen to 10% last year from around 15% in 2020.
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Local EV Producers
Follow Tesla's Lead
Many Chinese EV makers prefer to source from Tesla suppliers because of the perceived halo effect of using makers that meet Tesla's quality and production standards, people working for those companies said.
CATL, the world's biggest EV battery producer, relies on Tesla for 12% of its revenue and ships batteries to local EV makers such as NIO, XPeng and Li Auto, according to its last annual report.
Likewise, Tesla's manufacturing method has been taken up by Chinese rivals. For the Model Y, Tesla die-casts the car frame in one piece, a technique that reduces component use and weight, cuts costs and shortening assembly time.
The method is now used by a group of Chinese EV makers including NIO and XPeng, people familiar with the matter said. NIO uses the technique on its sedan ET5. It also sources from Tesla's car-frame supplier, Wencan Group."[1]
1. Business News: Musk Feted in China for EV Role. Kubota, Yoko; Huang, Raffaele; Cheng, Selina.
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 02 June 2023: B.3.
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