Tesla fights a Scandi-insurgency

Tesla is learning the hard way that the only thing Scandinavians love more than skiing and cured seafood is the right to collective bargaining agreements. 

Driving the news: Denmark and Norway’s largest private sector unions and Finland’s transport union plan to halt the delivery of all Tesla vehicles destined for Sweden that come through their ports if the company fails to reach a labour deal with striking Swedish workers. 

Catch-up: Workers at Swedish Tesla repair shops represented by the union IF Metall have been on strike since late October, demanding that Tesla sit down with them to hash out a collective bargaining agreement. Ten other Swedish unions have joined in sympathy strikes

  • This includes transport and harbour workers denying shipments of Tesla vehicles into the country. If Danish, Norwegian, and Finnish transport workers join in later this month, all potential entryways for Teslas into Sweden would be effectively closed off.

Why it’s happening: Scandinavia has a strong labour tradition, particularly in Sweden, where ~90% of the workforce works under collective bargaining agreements. The sympathy strikes aren’t just to support Tesla workers, but to protect an entire labour market model.

Why it matters: Tesla is the only major U.S. automaker without company-specific union representation, with CEO Elon Musk staunchly opposed to the very idea of organized labour. A Swedish victory might inspire Tesla labour action in countries like Germany or the U.S. 

Zoom out: Tesla is now facing pressure from the investor side, too. A Danish pension fund sold its Tesla holdings, and Norway’s mighty sovereign wealth fund—Tesla’s seventh largest shareholder—said Tesla must respect fundamental labour rights, like bargaining.—QH