US House committee chair 'concerned' by Tesla deals in China
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[April 11, 2023] By
Michael Martina and Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The leader of a U.S. congressional committee on
China said on Monday he was concerned about electric carmaker Tesla
Inc's dependency on China, a day after the company revealed plans to
open a Megapack battery factory in Shanghai.
Tesla announced the factory in a tweet on Sunday, and Chinese state
media said it would initially produce 10,000 Megapack units a year,
equal to around 40 gigawatt hours of energy storage, and complement a
huge existing Shanghai plant making electric vehicles.
Mike Gallagher, the Republican chair of the House of Representatives'
select committee on China's Communist Party, said he would like to know
how Tesla's CEO Elon Musk balances U.S. government support for Tesla and
its operations in China.
"I'm concerned about this," Gallagher told Reuters when asked about the
battery factory.
"Tesla seems entirely dependent, A, on the largesse of the federal
government via tax breaks, and B, upon access to the Chinese market,"
Gallagher said.
"The sort of deals they've struck there seem very concerning. I'd just
be curious to know how Elon Musk balances both of those," he said,
adding that Musk's space flight venture SpaceX was by contrast a
"massive success story."
Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment on
Gallagher's remarks.
Musk responded to criticism on Twitter on Sunday, saying in a tweet that
"Tesla is increasing production rapidly in Texas, California & Nevada."
The company's Shanghai factory accounted for more than half of the
automaker's global production in 2022. Tesla generated $18.15 billion in
revenue from China last year, accounting for over one fifth of its total
revenue.
Tesla's plans to open the Megapack factory come amid growing tensions
between China and the U.S. and a push by Beijing to woo foreign firms
back after the country's extended COVID-19 lockdowns battered its
economy.
'THINK ABOUT SUBPOENAS'
Gallagher met last week in California with technology and entertainment
companies – including Apple, Alphabet Inc's Google and Disney – about
their business dealings in China.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Representative Mike Gallagher
(R-WI) walks to a House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., February 7, 2023.
REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
His select committee, which Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy
created in January, has sought to convince Americans of the need to
forcefully compete with China and to "selectively decouple" the U.S.
and Chinese economies in certain strategic industries.
Gallagher said he hoped to engage with Tesla and other companies
going forward, but suggested he could require corporate executives
to testify if his investigation into their ties to China were
stymied.
"If we reach roadblocks and we get to a point where lawyers are
getting involved with answers, that's when you start to think about
subpoenas," he said.
Three sources at large U.S. companies, from technology to retail,
told Reuters they are anxious about the prospect of their executives
being called to testify about business operations in China and face
questions such as whether their companies use supplies produced in
China with forced labor.
Gallagher said he was aware executives from a range of businesses
might be concerned about testifying.
"It could be a major asset manager on Wall Street. It could be a
movie star or a high-powered producer. It could be the CEO of a big
tech company. If they want to do business in China, there are
certain questions nobody wants to be asked," he said.
Gallagher declined to discuss the topics of the committee's upcoming
hearings, but said he was on a "tight timeline."
So far the committee has held two hearings, one framing
"existential" U.S.-China competition, and the other on Chinese
government abuses toward Muslim minorities in its western Xinjiang
region.
(Reporting by Michael Martina, Patricia Zengerle. Additional
reporting by Hyunjoo Jin in San Francisco; Editing by Don Durfee and
Josie Kao)
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