Tesla sues Sweden in bid to avoid hit from strikes

In This Article:

Elon Musk is the chief executive of Tesla, which has launched a lawsuit against the Swedish state
Elon Musk is the chief executive of Tesla, which has launched a lawsuit against the Swedish state - AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

Tesla has sued Sweden’s government in an attempt to circumvent strikes crippling its operations in the country.

The electric-vehicle maker said it is suing “the Swedish state through the Swedish Transport Agency” after walkouts from postal workers halted the delivery of licence plates.

Postal workers have joined a wave of strikes in sympathy with metalworkers union members, who are in a dispute with Tesla over pay.

Dockworkers at Sweden’s four largest ports have also stopped the delivery of Tesla vehicles to put more pressure on the carmaker.

Tesla’s chief executive Elon Musk said the involvement of Swedish postal workers was “insane”.

In its lawsuit filed today, the Texas-based company said being unable to access the registration plates “constitutes an unlawful discriminatory attack directed at Tesla”.

Tesla has no manufacturing plant in Sweden, but has several service centres in the country.

Mikael Andersson, a spokesman for the Swedish Transport Agency, tod AFP that “we at the Swedish Transport Agency do not share this view” that it was blocking the distribution of license plates.

He added: “Therefore Tesla has decided to have the issue tested in court, which is their right.”

Read the latest updates below.


06:37 PM GMT

Signing off

That’s it for today. Chris Price will be back in the morning to cover what’s happening in the markets and the world of business. I’ll leave you with a couple of the latest stories from The Telegraph:


05:53 PM GMT

British are 'too modest' about their economy, says Business Secretary

Global companies should “ignore the doom-laden voices that you may hear” and instead look at Britain as a country with the “third-fastest growth in the G7 since 2010 and a faster recovery from Covid than Germany”, the Business Secretary, Kemi Badenoch, has said.

Speaking over afternoon tea to chief executives at the Global Investment Summit, she said:

British people are too often too modest about our own country. I didn’t think we’re bullish enough about selling the UK’s strengths...