But $10 billion? Is that price tag hyperbole?
It might be easy to say so, until we look at recent news from Rivian that it plans to spend $5 billion to build its second factory, this time in Georgia. The New York Times reports that Rivian’s new plant, east of Atlanta in Morgan and Walton counties, will have the capacity to produce up to 400,000 vehicles a year. That is fewer than the Giga Texas calculations. The Rivian Georgia plant is expected to eventually employ 7,500 people — again, fewer than the total estimates for direct and indirect job creation at Giga Texas.
$10 Billion Investment over the Lifespan of the Austin Gigafactory
The Tesla Austin Gigafactory, located in Travis County, Texas, was first announced in 2020, and earlier this month Tesla added that it had moved its Palo Alto, California, headquarters to Austin. The 5 facilities at its Austin Gigafactory are important as symbolism to the reorientation and core focus of the Tesla organization. The public face of the move is important, as shifting Tesla’s headquarters to Texas may benefit Musk personally more than his company — Texas has no income tax, and California’s income tax tops out at 13.3%. The price of Tesla shares has been on a roller coaster this month as Musk buys and sells his Tesla stock holdings to gain the funds necessary to pay his end-of-year tax bill.
Meanwhile, the company is expected to receive nearly $65 million in local tax rebates for the plant.
Such behind-the-scenes rationale, though, fails to illuminate the scope and significance of the Austin gigafactory. It is designed to have a combined square footage of nearly 4.3 million (0.4 square kilometer) and cost a combined $1.06 billion, according to November filings submitted to the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). The filings outlined Tesla’s spending on various manufacturing capabilities, and the company said at the time it plans to complete construction of its general assembly, paint, casting, stamping, and body shop facilities by December 31.
The filings indicated a budget for each section.
- General assembly: $493 million.
- Paint: $126 million.
- Casting $109 million.
- Stamping: $150 million.
- Body-in-white: $182 million.
The Austin Gigafactory will initially produce the Model Y with anticipated 500,000 units annually. The plan is to eventually build out to include the highly anticipated Cybertruck pickup and Semi long-haul truck. Volume production of the Tesla Semi is expected to begin in 2023 at the new gigafactory.
With expected generation of at least 20,000 direct jobs and at least 100,000 indirect jobs, the Austin Gigafactory “is progressing as planned,” Tesla said in a shareholder slide deck in October. “We are in the process of commissioning equipment and fabricating our first pre-production vehicles.”
A battery factory nearby will manufacture the 4680 cells for the battery packs that power the Semi. “The 4680 in-house cell project continues to progress. We are producing an increasing number of battery packs for testing purposes, and so far, the test results meet our current expectations. Front and rear body castings, both needed for our structural battery pack architecture, are being produced at Gigafactory Texas.”
Texas was also the launch site for the company’s telematics insurance product in early October. Musk indicated in October that the company’s insurance premiums “will be able to more accurately reflect chances of a collision than any other insurance product on the market. Additionally, we will proactively communicate to the user what driving adjustments need to be made to decrease probability of a collision.”