AutomobileWorld

You might not be allowed to drive Tesla cars in this Chinese city

Credit: Google

Tesla electric vehicles have been in the middle of several controversies in recent weeks, several of these are in China – the world’s biggest automotive market. With concerns ranging from safety and quality checks to possible surveillance by the on-board cameras, it has been a string of crisis-fighting exercises for Tesla here.

A few Tesla owners have now come out on Chinese social media platforms to point out that their EVs are being halted by police officials from being driven on highways around the city of Guangzhou in the wake of a recent accident here which involved a Tesla. This particular incident, according to state-run Global Times, saw a Tesla catching fire after colliding with a cement barrier and another vehicle. One person died in the accident that took place on April 13.

This may have raised safety concerns around Tesla models and several owners have now started pointing out that their respective cars are being halted by officials.

Tesla, on its part, issued a statement on Weibo, the micro-blogging Chinese site which is like Twitter. “In order to protect the rights and interests of consumers, we are willing to cooperate fully and provide the raw data of the vehicle half an hour before the incident to the third-party appraisal agency or the technology designated by the government. The regulatory authority or the consumer himself,” the statement read.

As for the local police department, it has denied that officials are specifically forbidding entry of Tesla vehicles on to the highways. Instead, it is stated that the measures are being taken in the interest of traffic management. This, however, does not explain Tesla cars lining up one after another here.

Chinese officials are reportedly keeping a close watch on quality-control-related issues and Tesla here is increasingly facing the heat. Apart from bad PR, it could make prospective customers wary of Tesla electric vehicles

Pranchal Srivastava