A far-left group has claimed responsibility for what it said was ‘sabotage’ targeting Tesla’s gigafactory in Germany, leading to the evacuation and shutdown of the EV plant.
Workers were evacuated today after a power outage that officials suspect was caused by arson.
Unknown perpetrators are suspected of deliberately setting fire to a high-voltage transmission line, according to the Interior Ministry in the state of Brandenburg.
The early morning fire caused the power supply to fail to the surrounding towns, including Grünheide, where the Tesla factory is located.
A letter claiming the suspected arson attack on the factory outside Berlin in the name of a far-left militant group calling itself the ‘Volcano Group’ surfaced on an alternative media website today.
‘We sabotaged Tesla,’ read the letter, posted on website kontrapolis.info, describing the attack as a gift marking March 8 – International Women’s Day.
The Tesla Gigafactory in Gruenheide near Berlin. Unknown perpetrators are suspected of deliberately setting fire to a high-voltage transmission line
Fire brigade and police units work in the area of the damaged high-voltage line, near the Tesla Gigafactory in Gruenheide near Berlin on Tuesday
Tesla factory fire brigade checks a plant building at the Tesla Gigafactory in Gruenheide near Berlin, on Tuesday
‘Tesla consumes earth, resources, people, workers and in return spits out 6,000 SUVs, killer cars and monster trucks each week.’
Police said they were aware of the letter, which was signed ‘Agua De Pau’, the name of a volcanic mountain in the Azores, and said they were checking its authenticity.
Brandenburg’s Interior Minister Michael Stübgen said initial findings indicate the fire was intentional, according to the German news agency dpa.
‘If the initial findings are confirmed, it will be a perfidious attack on our electricity infrastructure,’ Stübgen said.
The power outage at the Tesla factory comes as environmental activists have been staging a protest in a forest near the plant against plans by Tesla to expand.
Police works next to a damaged pylon after Tesla Gigafactory in Gruenheide near Berlin halted production and was left without power after suspected arson set an electricity pylon ablaze, near Steinfurt, Germany, on Tuesday
Police investigators work in the area of the damaged high-voltage line, near the Tesla Gigafactory in Gruenheide near Berlin, Germany, on Tuesday
Tesla factory fire brigade checks a plant building at the Tesla Gigafactory in Gruenheide near Berlin, Germany, on Tuesday
The ‘Stop Tesla’ protest has seen dozens of activists put up tents and built treehouses, some of them several meters above the ground – a tactic used in previous German environmental protests.
Tesla opened the factory in March 2022 – launching a challenge to German automakers on their home turf.
The company now wants to expand the facility to add a freight depot, warehouses and a company kindergarten. Those plans would entail felling more than 100 hectares (247 acres) of forest.
That has drawn opposition from environmentalists and some other local groups, who also worry about possible effects on the area’s water supply.
In a nonbinding vote in mid-February, residents of the municipality rejected Tesla’s plans, which still need approval by local authorities.
About 12,500 people work at the plant.