Hundreds of people have gathered at the Tesla factory in Grünheide to protest against expansion plans of the US electric vehicle manufacturer at the location near Berlin.
As per the Germany public broadcaster Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (rbb) reported.
What are protest demands?
The protesters said they acted in reaction to a local referendum in which residents rejected the plant’s expansion over concerns regarding the impact on the region’s groundwater reserves.
Why Tesla wants to expand its plant?
Protests intensified this week, when a new camp for participants was set up in the woodland surrounding the Tesla “gigafactory” on the outskirts of the German capital in the state of Brandenburg.
As per the report by Journalism for the energy transition, after a bank holiday on Thursday, the carmaker halted production on Friday also.
However, a spokesperson of the company told rbb that the production pause had been planned for months and was not connected to the protests.
Police said the protests were conducted peacefully, after an arson attack on the power grid that disrupted production at the factory in March had led to worries that some protesters could resort to violence.
According to newspaper Die Welt, a small group of protesters had also demonstrated in front of Brandenburg’s government building in Potsdam.
Protest groups called for a transport transition policy that does not only cater to electric car manufacturers, but strengthens public transport, calling the US carmaker a symbol of “automotive capitalism with a green veil.”
Tesla’s gigafactory near Berlin, the company’s first European factory which opened in 2022, was hailed by local and national policymakers as a breakthrough for the region’s economic prospects and the development of electric vehicles in Germany.
However, many local residents have been critical of the project due to its water consumption and the need to cut down several hectares of forest. Due to a slump in EV sales, Tesla recently announced global cuts to its workforce, which will also affect hundreds of jobs at the Grünheide factory.