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Tesla resumes work on German plant after court ruling
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) Feb 21, 2020

US electric car giant Tesla resumed clearing forest for its first European "Gigafactory" near Berlin Friday after beating back a legal challenge from environmentalists, local authorities confirmed.

"The work has started again," said a spokesperson for Gruenheide, a municipality in the state of Brandenburg where the factory is to be built.

On Thursday, a local administrative court lifted an injunction that had prevented Tesla from clearing a 90-hectare (220-acre) area of forest.

The injunction was issued last weekend after a complaint by the local environmental group "Green League".

Aside from claims that the factory would harm the drinking water supply and lead to more traffic, the group questioned whether the deforestation was legal.

Under pressure to open the factory on schedule in 2021, Tesla agreed with local authorities to begin cutting trees "at its own risk" while awaiting an official authorisation expected in March.

"Tesla should be subject to the same procedures as any other company," argued the Green League in a statement.

Thursday's ruling declared the tree-felling agreement to be legal however.

The resumption of work is a relief for the electromobility giant, which also faces a race against time to relocate the forest's wildlife before the breeding season begins in the next few weeks.

According to reports in German media, Tesla is to re-home several bats and ant colonies, and it has also promised to install nesting boxes for birds.

Brandenburg, a state surrounding Berlin, hopes that Tesla's arrival can generate thousands of high quality jobs.

But critics claim that deforestation could harm wildlife and endanger drinking water in the area.

Environmental protection is the latest hurdle Tesla has faced in Gruenheide, meanwhile.

Last month, authorities defused seven World War II bombs discovered at the proposed factory site.

kih/tgb/wai

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Indian-owned Jaguar Land Rover is rushing through deliveries of small car parts to Britain from China, where supply chains are hit by the deadly coronavirus, the Financial Times said Wednesday. "We have flown parts in suitcases from China to the UK," said JLR chief executive Ralf Speth, quoted by the FT and other British media. Speth said Jaguar Land Rover's British plants were "safe for this week" and next, but that there was "a risk for overall production" thereafter, owing to further parts be ... read more

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