Tesla gives Shanghai workers sleeping bags for the floor

Employees told to prepare for ‘closed-loop system’ in which workers live on-site

Tesla chief executive Elon Musk, who is also the world’s richest person. Photograph: Frederic J Brown/ Getty Images
Tesla chief executive Elon Musk, who is also the world’s richest person. Photograph: Frederic J Brown/ Getty Images

Tesla has restarted production at its Shanghai factory and laid out stringent measures for staff operating in the so-called "closed-loop system", according to people familiar with the matter.

The electric-vehicle maker will provide each worker with a sleeping bag and mattress, a memo sent to employees and viewed by Bloomberg shows.

Given there is not any purpose-built dorm people will be required to sleep on the floor in a designated area and there will be other spaces allocated for showering, entertainment (both yet-to-be completed) and catering, the memo shows.

All employees will have to take a nucleic acid test daily for the first three days, have their temperature checked twice a day, and wash their hands four times a day: twice in the morning and twice again in the afternoon, the memo shows.

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Workers will be provided with three meals and be given an allowance of about 400 yuan (€58) a day, although the actual amount will depend on a person’s position and level, one of the people said.

A Shanghai-based Tesla representative did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Officials in Shanghai have been encouraging companies to restart production that was halted due to the city’s strict lockdown by using closed-loop systems in which workers live on-site at their factories.

So far more than 600 firms have restarted operations, including Quanta Computer, which makes laptops for Apple.

Tesla told some employees on Friday to prepare to enter a closed-loop system on April 17th after a weeks-long suspension as Shanghai attempted to contain the Covid outbreak.

To bypass current restrictions on residential compounds in the city, the company issued a special certificate for those on call and arranged shuttle buses to bring them back to the plant.

Only staff residing in the lowest risk residential compounds and those who have completed a two-shot vaccination regime will be allowed to re-enter, joining the some 400 staff already on site due to pandemic prevention and emergency measures, according to the memo.

Midnight

The last closed-loop workers entered the factory just after midnight and are expected to work in the system through May 1st, although that may change in accordance with the city’s pandemic prevention policies, the memo said.

Prior to the pandemic-inducted halt on March 28th, Tesla workers in Shanghai were working three shifts covering 24 hours, seven days a week. Factory staff would work four days on and then have two days off.

No , they are being asked to work 12 hours a day, six days straight with one day off, people familiar with the matter said.

The company’s Shanghai plant was producing about 2,100 cars a day, churning out 182,174 vehicles in the first quarter. Ramping production back up from such a long shutdown won’t be an instant process, however.

Tesla only has inventory for just over two weeks based on its new closed-loop schedule, another person familiar with the matter said, and logistics are a major problem for many other parts. – Bloomberg