California Still Vying for Tesla’s $5B Giga Battery Factory

Are California lawmakers willing to overlook environmental regulations in order to lure 6,500 potential jobs?

The contest for Tesla's $5 billion Giga battery factory still includes California -- as long as the Golden State's lawmakers are willing to overlook long-established environmental regulations. Lawmakers in a number of states are looking to lure the manufacturing hub with its potential to provide more than 6,500 jobs. Sites in California that have been floated include an area near the Salton Sea and in the state capital, Sacramento.

In March, we covered the deep politics surrounding the site selection process for the Tesla Giga factory, which has pitted states against one another for the rights to the $5 billion high-tech manufacturing site. Tesla aims to build 500,000 electric vehicles per year by 2020 and will need an unprecedented volume of lithium-ion batteries to hit this target -- and that's why Tesla must build the Giga factory.

Tesla CTO JB Straubel has spoken of attacking battery cost with the Giga factory by "doubling the worldwide capacity in a single factory and reinventing the supply chain." A total of 35 gigawatt-hours of cell production from the new plant will be devoted to meeting the needs of the company's Fremont automotive plant, and 15 gigawatt-hours will be devoted to stationary battery packs.

Tesla intends on breaking ground on two sites and beginning the construction process at multiple sites to avoid delays.

We recently revealed one of the proposed sites as a location near Reno, Nevada and provided photographs courtesy of our Nevada source on the ground. The site is located at the Reno Tahoe Industrial Center at 2641 Portofino Drive.

In June, California made an aggressive move to throw its hat in the ring, putting forth new legislation looking to remove the regulatory and permitting roadblocks to constructing this enormous project. California Senate Bill SB-1309 was introduced by Senate President Pro Tempore Darrell Steinberg, a Democrat, and Senator Ted Gaines, a Republican. Some of the relevant language is excerpted below:

Allen Young of Silicon Valley Business Journal notes that "the legislation does not call out by name the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), but some modification to the controversial law can be easily inferred," according to a Capitol staffer.

Today, the Los Angeles Times reported that the state is considering an incentive package that would exempt Tesla Motors from the 50-year-old environmental law, according to Sen. Gaines, who suggested "granting the automaker waivers for significant portions of the nearly half-century-old California Environmental Quality Act," as reported in the article. Like most states in the running, the California campaign also includes a massive tax break worth up to $500 million, according to reports.

CEQA, signed into law by Ronald Reagan during his environmentalist phase, is "California's broadest environmental law" according to the state government site, which defines CEQA's purpose as:

Among the incentives proposed for Tesla have been the ability to limit prior environmental review of plans for the California battery plant site.

The article quotes David Pettit, an environmental lawyer for the Natural Resources Defense Council, as saying, "I think it's a terrible idea. For one thing, it does indicate that we have two systems of law in California -- one for the super rich, and one for the developer doing multifamily housing.” The newspaper quoted Kathryn Phillips, director of the Sierra Club in California, as saying that waiving CEQA provisions is “unacceptable.” 

Tesla Motors moves quickly as a corporation. We'll soon learn if California's efforts to lure the Giga factory by sacrificing its environmental policy will pay off.

Giga Factory Facts and Figures

Here's a rendering of the proposed plant: