Musk’s Private Jet Departs Shanghai After Whirlwind China Visit

Elon Musk’s private jet has departed Shanghai, wrapping up his first visit to China since the pandemic that included meetings with senior government officials and a late-night visit to Tesla Inc.’s Shanghai Gigafactory.

(Bloomberg) — Elon Musk’s private jet has departed Shanghai, wrapping up his first visit to China since the pandemic that included meetings with senior government officials and a late-night visit to Tesla Inc.’s Shanghai Gigafactory. 

The billionaire’s plane took off from Shanghai’s Hongqiao airport around 11:22 a.m. local time Thursday bound for Texas, flight tracking website Umetrip showed. 

Read more: Musk Meets China Government Officials on Second Day of Trip 

Musk’s visit started Tuesday in Beijing, where he met Foreign Minister Qin Gang and emphasized the importance of maintaining ties with China. He also met with the president of battery giant Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd., Yuqun Zeng on Tuesday, according to photos posted on social media. 

On Wednesday, he met Jin Zhuanglong, China’s minister for industry and information technology, and visited the Ministry of Commerce, accompanied by Tom Zhu, Tesla’s senior vice president of automotive, and Grace Tao, Tesla’s vice president in charge of government and public affairs in Greater China. He was also photographed at Peking duck restaurant 1949.  

He then flew to Shanghai, where he paid a late night visit to the Tesla plant, greeting around 100 employees. He treated them to hamburgers and soft drinks and left about an hour later, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to identified discussing private matters.

Tesla’s China team also showed Musk the first trial production car of the revamped Model 3, Bloomberg News reported earlier. The updated Model 3, Tesla’s first mass-market sedan, is slightly longer and sportier than the earlier version and has a sleeker interior design, Bloomberg reported last month.

The automaker has enjoyed significant support from China’s central government as the first wholly-owned foreign carmaker in the nation as well as the from Shanghai authorities, such as access to cheap land and expedited planning approvals. City officials even provided the EV maker with masks and protective equipment at the start of the pandemic. During the most recent lockdown, authorities helped Tesla secure an old military camp to house workers so it could restart production under a closed-loop system.

The Shanghai plant accounted for more than half of Tesla’s global production in 2022, and the facility can now produce as many as 1.1 million cars a year. In return, the US automaker contributed almost one-quarter of Shanghai’s total automotive production value last year, and local authorities pledged last month to continue to boost ties with the company through autonomous driving and robot modules.

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