After Tesla deal, Shanghai to speed up cancellation of
foreign ownership limits
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[July 11, 2018]
By David Stanway
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Shanghai will
accelerate efforts to cancel restrictions on foreign investment in the
auto manufacturing sector, a government official said on Wednesday, a
day after Tesla <TSLA.O> said it would build a wholly owned auto plant
in the city.
Earlier this year, China said it would scrap foreign ownership caps for
companies making fully electric or plug-in hybrid vehicles in 2018 and
all automotive ventures by 2022. The announcement marked a major policy
shift in the world's top car market that has capped foreign ownership in
the sector at 50 percent for over two decades.
Huang Ou, deputy director of the Shanghai Commission of Economy and
Information Technology, told reporters at a press conference that the
city government was engaged in preparations to support the Tesla
project, set to be Shanghai's biggest foreign-invested project.
"The next step is for the city government to do the support work to
allow the project to go into operation as quickly as possible," he said.
"In line with state plans, we will speed up the cancellation of foreign
ownership restrictions in the car manufacturing sector," he said.
Huang declined to comment, however, on the size of the project or when
the construction of a plant with capacity to produce 500,000 Tesla
battery electric cars a year - large by auto industry standards - would
start.
Tesla Inc <TSLA.O> Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk landed a deal on
Tuesday to build a new and wholly owned auto plant in Shanghai, the
company's first factory outside the United States. It would double the
size of the electric car maker's global manufacturing.
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A woman sits in a Tesla Model 3 car during a media preview at the
Auto China 2018 motor show in Beijing, China April 25, 2018.
REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo
The deal was announced as Tesla raised prices on U.S.-made vehicles it sells in
China to offset the cost of tariffs imposed by the Chinese government on U.S.
imports in retaliation for U.S. President Donald Trump's heavier duties on
Chinese goods.
An auto assembly plant half the size of the envisioned Tesla Shanghai plant
would normally cost $1 billion to build, according to automotive industry
officials and experts.
The Shanghai government said in a statement on Tuesday it welcomed Tesla’s move
to invest not only in a new factory in the city but in research and development.
Chinese magazine Caijing, citing sources close to the project, reported on
Tuesday that the plant's exact location had not been decided and construction
would start early next year.
(Reporting by David Stanway; Writing by Brenda Goh and Norihiko Shirouzu;
Editing by Himani Sarkar and Neil Fullick)
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