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A view of the Tesla ‘gigafactory’ construction site near Berlin
A view of the Tesla ‘gigafactory’ construction site near Berlin where forest clearing work has been suspended following a court injunction. Photograph: Hannibal Hanschke/Reuters
A view of the Tesla ‘gigafactory’ construction site near Berlin where forest clearing work has been suspended following a court injunction. Photograph: Hannibal Hanschke/Reuters

Lizards and snakes bring halt to work on Tesla plant near Berlin

This article is more than 3 years old

Environmentalists win injunction forcing US electric carmaker to suspend forest clearance

Tesla has been forced to suspend forest clearing for a new German plant after environmentalists won an injunction over threats to the habitats of resident lizards and snakes.

The American electric carmaker ran into opposition from two nature conservation groups, which launched urgent court action against the felling of 83 hectares (205 acres) of pine trees for its huge “gigafactory” plant at Grünheide, south of Berlin.

The news risks delaying the company’s hopes to roll its first electric cars off the assembly line at the site in July 2021.

The administrative court in Frankfurt an der Oder said it issued an interim injunction on Monday “imposing a temporary halt to clearing” to allow for an examination of the case “in view of the rapid progress of the clearing work”.

A final decision on the complaint filed by the Brandenburg state chapter of the Nature and Biodiversity Conservation Union (NABU) and Green League is still pending.

Among the concerns was the destruction of habitats of protected species of sand lizards and smooth snakes in the area, or disturbing them during their winter hibernation.

“Tesla cannot and must not place itself above the law,” said Heinz Herwig Mascher, the chairman of the Green League in Brandenburg, in a statement.

Despite the energy-saving image of Tesla, run by billionaire business magnate Elon Musk, the plant has long been in environmentalists’ crosshairs.

Elon Musk at the construction site earlier this year. Photograph: Odd Andersen/AFP/Getty Images

In February, a court temporarily halted deforestation work over the alleged impact on wildlife and concerns it might harm the drinking water supply.

Work was also stopped earlier this year as authorities defused seven second world war bombs discovered at the site.

Tesla’s first European site still only has provisional construction permits, and has been authorised by local officials to begin work at its own risk, pending final authorisation.

Tesla said the land covered under the latest injunction must be cleared to allow for pipelines and storage, according to the Tagesspiegel newspaper.

Last week, Tesla was allowed to start installing machinary in the gigafactory’s paint shop, with the vast factory planned to churn out 500,000 Model 3 sedans and Model Y SUVs each year.

Musk recently announced the company was looking to build the world’s largest battery factory at Grünheide alongside the car plant.

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