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These unnamed sources told Reuters that the automaker has been researching whether EV components supplied by Chinese vendors can adhere to regional rules in North America. The billionaire, however, put a stop to these suspicions by tweeting in response to the Reuters report. Reuters published its official piece on Twitter on Friday, November 11. Elon Musk noticed the tweet quite fast. More than 240,000 people have already liked, quoted, and retweeted the Tesla CEO's message.Exclusive: Tesla is considering exporting China-made electric cars to the U.S., a reversal that would reflect the automaker's deepening cost advantage at its Shanghai plant and slower demand from Chinese consumers https://t.co/GtovEdL7u0 pic.twitter.com/AtT4gpKD0V
— Reuters (@Reuters) November 11, 2022
Naturally, Musk's message received a lot of comments from Twitter users. One of them suggested that Twitter include tools for effectively preventing fake posts. The individual continued by mentioning how this would effect accounts' exposure on the social networking site and help accounts rank. Musk responded to this tweet directly, stating that they are already working to make it happen. The tech CEO predicted that @CommunityNotes would have a significant impact on falsehoods once it went global. This merely demonstrates that Elon is firmly denying the export rumours for Tesla EVs built in China.False
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 11, 2022
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