Tesla going big with 'Gigafactory'

File photo shows a Tesla Model S on the assembly line.

File photo shows a Tesla Model S on the assembly line.

Published Feb 27, 2014

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New York - Tesla Motors has announced plans for a so-called “Gigafactory” for advanced electric car batteries as part of a plan to move from niche manufacturer to mass market carmaker.

The maker of pricey and coveted electric vehicles said the new battery factory calls for an investment of $4 billion to $5

billion (R43 - R54bn), and will include partners, with some reports saying Japanese group Panasonic was in talks on the deal.

“The Gigafactory is designed to reduce cell costs much faster than the status quo and, by 2020, produce more lithium ion batteries annually than were produced worldwide in 2013,” the company said on its blog.

“By the end of the first year of volume production of our mass market vehicle, we expect the Gigafactory will have driven down the per kWh cost of our battery pack by more than 30 percent.”

“At full implementation, the Tesla Gigafactory is expected to have 6500 dedicated Tesla and production partner employees,” the company said in a document filed with regulators.

“The Tesla Gigafactory is currently expected to attain full production capacity in 2020, which is anticipated to be sufficient for the production of approximately 500 000 vehicles annually and stationary storage applications.”

The company founded by tech entrepreneur Elon Musk said it had not selected a final site for the facility, but “we currently expect that it will be located in one of the following states:

Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico or Texas.”

BATTERIES FOR TOYOTA

The Japanese daily Nikkei said new facility, expected to handle everything from processing raw materials to assembly, is intended to go onstream in 2017 and to produce small, lightweight batteries for Tesla and possibly for Toyota and other carmakers.

Panasonic has worked with Tesla on developing next-generation car batteries and last year expanded the contract to supply lithium-ion units to the firm to about two billion cells until 2017.

Contacted by AFP, Panasonic said it is “studying every possible way to strengthen ties with Tesla” without confirming the report.

Consumer Reports this week called the car Tesla Model S the top vehicle of 2014 to buy, calling it a “technological tour de force.” The Model S the magazine tested had a sticker price of $89 650 (R968 000), compared with an average of about $34 900 (R377 000) for the remaining nine best model categories.

Sapa-AFP

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