Tesla Now Delivers In Hong Kong; Good Luck With Japan

International Business Times

Published Jul 28, 2014 02:55PM ET

Updated Jul 28, 2014 03:15PM ET

Tesla Now Delivers In Hong Kong; Good Luck With Japan

By Angelo Young - After delivering a few models earlier this month, Tesla Motors Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) has revved up its sales presence in Hong Kong, completing the right-hand-drive version of the Model S electric car.

Tesla celebrated the event last week at Hong Kong’s Kai Tak Cruise Terminal where dozens of members of the local press were dazzled as Dennis Lo and seven other local Tesla fans took delivery of the critically acclaimed sedan.

Jerome Guillen, Tesla’s vice president of global sales, told the audience Tesla has started working on expanding the company’s quick-charge stations in Hong Kong that allow Tesla owners to top off their batteries free of charge. Tesla currently has seven Supercharger stations in mainland China and two in Hong Kong, the company’s website says.

Tesla and founder Elon Musk are also keen to make inroads in China. But the company’s fledgling efforts to enter the market have stumbled. Many of the 31 Tesla customers who pre-ordered Model S vehicles last fall have not yet received their cars despite Tesla’s promise to deliver them by April. Now, 23 of the customers have filed a grievance with Tesla China, alleging fraud.

Delivery problems aside, Tesla faces other hurdles in China. Customers living outside Beijing and Shanghai may lack access to essential charging stations, and may have to install their own -- adding to the cost of the all-electric car, which, at $118,000, is far higher than in the U.S. Tesla cars have also failed to overcome complicated customs roadblocks.

Nevertheless, Musk remains optimistic about Tesla’s potential in China. “At some point in the next three to four years we’ll be establishing local manufacturing in China,” the CEO told Bloomberg.

China, whose cities suffer from notoriously bad air pollution, has established a target of 5 million alternative-energy vehicles by 2020.

Tesla’s next stop after China is Japan where the company will attempt to penetrate a highly protected auto market whose top automakers are working to develop their own electric, hybrid electric and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.