Hibernating snakes halt tree felling at Tesla's factory site in Germany
Tesla’s permission to start building its first European factory and design centre hinged on conditional approval by local planning authorities, who are obliged to consult local environmental groups and the community

Hibernating snakes are complicating Elon Musk's plans for a gigafactory near Berlin.
A German court has told the US billionaire's electric vehicle company Tesla to suspend clearing of a forest at the site of the proposed factory in Gruenheide after environmentalists said that cutting down more trees could endanger hibernating snakes.
"The Landesumweltamt (state environmental authority) and Tesla will now be consulted, they need to make submissions by this afternoon and then we assess the situation," a spokesman for the administrative court in Frankfurt an der Oder in eastern Germany said on Tuesday.
Tesla declined to comment. The Landesumweltamt declined to comment further.
Tesla's permission to start building its first European factory and design centre hinged on conditional approval by local planning authorities, who are obliged to consult local environmental groups and the community.
Environmental activists from a local group, NABU, told Reuters that the smooth snake, also known as Coronella austriaca, may be hibernating in the ground at the site, and that tree-cutting activity may disturb its winter slumber.
Local authorities are also reviewing claims by NABU that Lacerta agilis, also known as sand lizards, could be put at risk by Tesla's expansion, the group said.
The carmaker announced plans last November to build the Gigafactory in Gruenheide, outside Berlin with plans to have the factory up and running by July 1, 2021 to start building its electric crossover, the Model Y.