The Business Times

Tesla releases data logs of China car crash after viral protest

Published Fri, Apr 23, 2021 · 12:36 PM

[SINGAPORE] Tesla has released the data logs of a car that crashed in China to the woman who garnered global headlines after she staged a protest at this week's Shanghai Auto Show claiming the vehicle's brakes had failed.

The Model 3 car, which was being driven by Zhang Yazhou's father at the time, was travelling at 118.5 km an hour just before impact and slowed to around 48.5 km an hour after the brakes were applied, according to a local media report.

The data also showed that the driver braked more than 40 times in the half-hour before the crash, and at multiple points the vehicle was travelling at more than 100 km per hour.

Tesla and Ms Zhang have been arguing for several months over whether the car was speeding and if the braking system failed, the report said. Tesla has said its stance was based on vehicle data, which Ms Zhang alleges was tampered with.

The release of the car's data logs - provided after the market regulator of Zhengzhou, Henan, where the crash occurred, ordered Tesla's branch there to unconditionally provide the woman with complete driving data for the 30 minutes before the crash - caps a big week for the US automaker.

The drama started on Monday on day one of the Shanghai Auto Show, when Ms Zhang climbed on one of Tesla's display vehicles. Her protest was captured by scores of onlookers who then uploaded the footage to social media, helping it go viral.

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Tesla initially played down the incident, saying Ms Zhang was "widely known" for protesting, but quickly struck a more conciliatory tone after the critics piled in.

China's state-run Xinhua news agency published an article on Tuesday that said the quality of Tesla's electric vehicles must meet market expectations in order to win consumer trust.

A few hours later, the Communist Party itself posted a commentary on its WeChat account saying Tesla should respect Chinese consumers and comply with local laws and regulations.

Tesla then issued a wide-ranging apology and subsequently released the data Ms Zhang had been asking for after the Zhengzhou regulator's directive.

The unwelcome publicity comes at a time when consumer sentiment toward Tesla does appear to be souring. Although it is still the No 1 selling electric carmaker in the country, it has come under fire for its perceived arrogance toward car owners.

Many have taken to social media to complain about its lack of customer service and seeming disinterest in addressing problems. Others are angry that they've purchased a Tesla only to discover the company has steeply discounted the same model weeks later.

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