The Latest News From The Tesla Gigafactory 2 In Buffalo Isn’t Good

February 11th, 2019 by Steve Hanley

CleanTechnica is one of the biggest cheerleaders for Elon Musk and Tesla. We have published dozens of stories about how the mainstream (and not so mainstream) media spread false information about the man and the company, such as last week’s tempest in a teapot about how many miles Musk travels each year in his private jet. Most of those who write for CleanTechnica have put our money where our mouths are. We own stock in Tesla because we believe in Elon Musk and his mission.

Gigafactory 2 — Much Ado About Nothing?

That being said, we have to report that Tesla’s Gigafactory 2 — the solar panel and solar roof factory in Buffalo, New York — appears to be a disaster waiting to happen. The state of New York ponied up $750 million to refurbish and equip the factory for Tesla, which promised to bring 1,460 desperately needed jobs to the Buffalo area by April of 2020. The workforce is well below that number today and in fact 50 people have recently been laid off as a result of the company’s 7% reduction in force initiative.

As much as it pains us to say so, the evidence indicates the purchase of SolarCity by Tesla in 2016 had its flaws. Critics of the deal said at the time it was simply a bailout for Musk’s cousins, Lyndon and Peter Rive, but Musk cut them short by staging a splashy reveal for the new Solar Roof system he claimed would revolutionize the residential solar industry. Since then? Nothing much.

Two of the workers recently laid off at Gigafactory 2 — Dale Witherell and Dennis Scott — tell WIVB Channel 4 News in Buffalo that when they complained about conditions at the factory, they were told by a supervisor that Tesla is trying to “build the plane as we’re trying to fly it” and that “hiccups” are part of being a startup.

“Some weeks we produced enough solar modules for zero homes and probably the best I saw was maybe four homes in a week, so that is alarmingly scary to obviously be a part of a company who doesn’t have any sense of urgency to tackle these issues and get them working correctly,” Witherell said. “During my employment there, nothing improved during the entire employment as far as production.”

Officially, Tesla has 400 employees at the Buffalo factory and Panasonic, which manufactures conventional solar panels there, employs another 400. Bearing in mind the recently laid off workers may have an axe to grind when it comes to their former employer, Witherell says those numbers are inflated. “If you took all of our shifts, there are about 50 people, maybe 60 people at best per shift, there are four shifts,” Scott told WIVB. “You do the math. Are you going to tell me there are 200 people up in the front office?” (For what it’s worth, 50 × 4 is 200. Most companies don’t have all of their employees working at the same time.)

The television station filed a request with the company under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) asking for information about the number of people actually working at the factory. When it got no response from the company after three months, it appealed to the state of New York. In response, it got back information showing that Tesla employed 188 workers and Panasonic employed 279 workers as of the end of 2017. State officials said they have no data for 2018.

“Tesla is required to provide employee numbers annually (broken down by quarter). The 2018 numbers will not be reported until early 2019,” said Patricia Bucklin, vice president of Administration for Fuller Management Corporation, in an email to WIVB.

A Dog & Pony Show

Last November, Tesla hosted a press event that offered reporters a look inside the factory. Witherell and Scott say it was a “dog and pony show” that deliberately disguised the fact that virtually no actual production was taking place at the factory. Instead, workers often spent time watching videos on their phones, according to these ex-employees.

Tesla spent a month preparing for the press junket, the former employees say. The company built walls to hide unused equipment and blocked off large areas of the factory from view. Tesla has responded, saying the workers are mistaken. What was actually going on was new warehouse space being constructed. The event was tightly controlled. No video cameras were allowed inside. Instead, the company provided footage for the media to use.

“It was all fabricated for show,” Witherell says. “There was no actual production that day so some of the teams in their specific area were instructed to make sure they looked busy and they actually were working on the same module over and over again.”

The amount of residential solar Tesla installs every quarter has dropped significantly since the company acquired SolarCity, according to the Buffalo News (and others). It says it installed just 73 MW of new solar in the 4th quarter of 2018. That’s lower than the 82 MW SolarCity installed in the first quarter of 2014, which was previously a pretty low quarter for SolarCity. (See the chart on Buffalo News.)

Is The Solar Roof For Real?

For its part, Tesla says it is working hard to perfect its Solar Roof. In the latest company letter to shareholders, Elon Musk wrote, “We are continuing to install solar roofs at a slow pace to gather further learning from our design changes, as well as about the viability of our installation processes by implementing them in areas around the U.S. that are experiencing inclement weather.” A cynic might parse those words and conclude the Solar Roof just doesn’t work as advertised outside the sunny climes of Southern California.

Much like the dog that finally catches a car after chasing it down the street, Tesla doesn’t seem quite sure how to capitalize on its acquisition of SolarCity. It needs to figure things out soon. If it fails to have the promised number of employees by a year from April, it owes the state of New York over $41 million a year in penalties. Is there light at the end of the tunnel? Maybe. Workers at the plant say last December they were introduced to a new product that will be built at Gigafactory 2 starting later this year.

Nobody is talking in specifics about what they saw, but the guess is that it is a new grid-scale energy storage product that may or may not be called the Megapack. Rumors have been floating around for months about just such a development, but an email to Tesla from CleanTechnica got a very polite but very firm, “No comment.” Why the company would manufacture battery cells in Nevada and ship them all the way to Buffalo to be assembled into battery packs is unclear.

A Little Respect

One of the things that rankles employees and local officials in Buffalo is what they perceive as a lack of respect from the company and its senior managers. While Musk jets around the world in pursuit of his dream of weaning the world off its addiction to fossil fuels, he has reportedly never once set foot in the Buffalo factory. Gigafactory 2 seems to be an afterthought.

As the Buffalo News said in an editorial on February 10, “We worry about Tesla and its Buffalo solar business. Tesla’s survival depends on its new Model 3 electric automobile succeeding. The Model 3 is off to a rocky start, so Tesla has put its solar business on life support to focus cash and attention on the Model 3. Put in the same bind, most business people would make the same decision.”

The editors are sympathetic to the company’s plight. “It takes a strong stomach to deal with the ups and downs of new markets and new industries.” But here is the real message: “It has been a century since Buffalo has been on the cutting edge of anything this big.” Buffalo is like many American cities that were once industrial powerhouses but have now been passed by in the race to create an all-digital economy. That sense of being forgotten is what propelled Donald Trump into the White House, as ironic and counterproductive as that election was. Tesla is risking a similar backlash from the local community and the state of New York, a backlash that could damage the company in unforeseen and unpredictable ways.

Musk has treated Gigafactory 2 with a dose of what former New York senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan called “benign neglect.” That needs to change. The man who slept on the factory floor in Fremont during what he called “production hell” needs to devote some serious attention to what is going on — or not going on — in Buffalo. There are few instances in which Musk can be faulted for not doing enough, but Gigafactory 2 is clearly one of them.









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