National Post (National Edition)

Semiconduc­tor shortage hits global automakers

- SHIHO TAKEZAWA AND CHRISTOPH RAUWALD

A semiconduc­tor shortage is dragging on some of the world's biggest auto manufactur­ers, costing Daimler AG, Nissan Motor Co., Honda Motor Co. and Ford Motor Co. production of a range of cars.

Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler joined its German peer Volkswagen AG in announcing it's affected by the industrywi­de supply bottleneck, without quantifyin­g the impact. Honda said it will cut domestic output by about 4,000 cars this month at one of its factories in Japan, while Nissan is adjusting production of its Note hatchback model. Ford is idling a sport-utility vehicle factory in Kentucky next week, pulling forward previously planned downtime due to the chip shortage.

VW, the world's biggest carmaker, announced last month that it would need to adjust first-quarter manufactur­ing plans around the globe because of the shortage. The company said chipmakers reassigned some of their production capacity to consumer electronic­s and other sectors last year and were caught off guard by surprising­ly resilient auto demand. The amount of VW car output lost could be in the low six-digit range, according to people familiar with the matter.

The supply-chain issue could keep the auto industry from getting off to a smooth start to the year after the coronaviru­s undercut output during much of 2020. Struggles to rebuild inventory in some markets led the largest U.S. car dealer and lender to complain the industry has been missing opportunit­ies for more sales.

Ford said it is working with its suppliers “to address potential production constraint­s tied to the global semiconduc­tor shortage.”

Honda's Japanese peer Suzuki Motor Corp. also is altering output, though there's no plan at this point to idle factories, a spokespers­on said. A Subaru Corp. representa­tive said it's been dealing with some parts-supply delays and may adjust output.

“The spread of the coronaviru­s has impacted procuremen­t in semiconduc­tors and related parts,” a Honda spokespers­on said in a statement Friday. “We will address this issue by adjusting production and replacing car models.”

Honda will trim output at its Suzuka plant, located in Japan's eastern Mie prefecture. The plant makes the Fit subcompact, which is also marketed as the Jazz. The chip shortage could potentiall­y impact tens of thousands of vehicles in the March quarter, Nikkei reported, citing an unidentifi­ed source.

Nissan's Oppama plant in Japan will reduce Note production this month, a spokespers­on said, without giving details. The Nikkei said the company would cut output to 5,000 cars a month, from 15,000.

Cars use chips for functions as simple as opening the trunk to more complicate­d tasks like driver assistance systems. Electric vehicles usually pack more of them than models powered by combustion engines.

Robert Bosch GmbH and Continenta­l AG, Europe's largest car-parts makers, acknowledg­ed the chip-shortage issue last month after VW's announceme­nt and have been trying to limit the impact on customers.

Peugeot maker PSA Group has not been affected, a spokeswoma­n said Friday. Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV, which is set to merge with PSA after shareholde­rs approved their plans to combine last week, had no immediate comment.

General Motors Co. said it faces no current impact on output but is looking for ways to prevent a shortage at its plants.

“Our supply-chain organizati­on is working closely with our supply base to find solutions for our suppliers' semiconduc­tor requiremen­ts and to mitigate impacts on GM production,” it said in a statement.

 ?? KRISZTIAN BOCSI / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? A semiconduc­tor shortage could keep the auto industry from getting off to a smooth start this year, affecting
many of the world's major manufactur­ers.
KRISZTIAN BOCSI / BLOOMBERG FILES A semiconduc­tor shortage could keep the auto industry from getting off to a smooth start this year, affecting many of the world's major manufactur­ers.

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