Musk's Scandinavian woes deepen as Tesla loses Swedish court case, Finnish union joins port blockade

Authored by cnbc.com and submitted by Nerdlinger
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C.E.O. of Tesla, Chief Engineer of SpaceX and C.T.O. of X Elon Musk takes the stage during the New York Times annual DealBook summit on November 29, 2023 in New York City.

Tesla 's troubles with labor unions in Scandinavia deepened as it lost legal action against Sweden's postal service over its refusal to deliver license plates to the U.S. electric vehicle giant.

The postal service's workers blocked Tesla license plate deliveries late last month in a show of solidarity with mechanics striking over the company's refusal to sign a collective bargaining agreement with employees, which is customary in Sweden.

Tesla took legal action while CEO Elon Musk branded the move "insane," but a Swedish court ruled Thursday that PostNord will not be forced to deliver license plates for now.

Possibly more concerning for Musk, however, will be the sympathy strikes spreading throughout Scandinavia as fellow unions coalesce their support behind the region's deeply entrenched principle of collective bargaining as a lynchpin of labor relations.

Union members across a host of Swedish industries have joined the secondary strike action with members of trade union IF Metall, who have been embroiled in an ongoing battle with Tesla for around six weeks.

Earlier this week, Denmark's largest trade union announced its own sympathy strike to prevent Tesla cars being delivered to Danish ports and transported into Sweden.

Norway's largest private sector union then on Wednesday announced its intention to begin blocking vehicle shipments destined for Sweden from Dec. 20.

Finnish transport workers' union AKT on Thursday confirmed that a blockade on Tesla vehicles earmarked for Sweden would also come into force across all Finnish ports from Dec. 20.

AKT Chairman Ismo Kokko said collective agreements for workers were "an essential part of the Nordic labor market system," according to Finnish newspaper Helsingin Sanomat.

Meanwhile, one of Denmark's largest pension funds on Wednesday announced it would sell its holdings of Tesla stock over the U.S. company's refusal to enter into agreements with labor unions. PensionDanmark sold the shares at a market value of 476 million Danish kroner ($68.8 million), according to Reuters.

Dave37 on December 8th, 2023 at 17:15 UTC »

Finland, Danmark! Mina nordiska bröder! Fan vad stolt jag är över er!

Norge, vårt vackra, sköna, stolta broder! Kom med i kampen! Kom in i värmen!

TheWingus on December 8th, 2023 at 16:23 UTC »

I’ll never understand wealthy people like Elon. Like the only thing you have to do is lay low and shut up, that’s it. Take Mike Bloomberg for example, dude has an estimated net worth of 96 billion. Came out in 2020 and was like, “Hey I wanna be the president” we collectively said, “No, but thanks anyway” so he goes “Oh okay, well thanks for your time” and fucks off home. I haven’t read his name in a single headline in 3 years!

I can’t go 8 hours without reading something about Elon saying or doing something stupid. Like dude just shut up and play Minecraft or something.

My_Penbroke on December 8th, 2023 at 15:56 UTC »

I watch gleefully as this man’s list of woes grows