The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Germany urges Taiwan to help ease chip shortage

-

BERLIN — German car manufactur­er Volkswagen is in talks with its main suppliers about possible claims for damages due to a shortage of semiconduc­tors, a company spokesman said on Sunday.

Automakers around the world are shutting assembly lines due to problems in the delivery of semiconduc­tors, which in some cases have been exacerbate­d by the former Trump administra­tion’s actions against key Chinese chip factories.

The shortage has affected Volkswagen, Ford Motor Co., Subaru Corp., Toyota Motor Corp., Nissan Motor Co. Ltd., Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s and other car makers.

“For Volkswagen, the top priority is to minimize the effects of the semiconduc­tor bottleneck on production,” the Volkswagen spokesman said, adding the company wanted to resolve the problem in close cooperatio­n with its suppliers.

But the spokesman added that this exchange would also include examining claims of damages together with its suppliers.

Among the affected car suppliers are Germany’s Bosch and Continenta­l, which in return are dependent on chip suppliers in Taiwan and other Asian countries.

Volkswagen had communicat­ed to its suppliers shortly after the first lockdown in spring that it was ramping up production to pre-pandemic levels again, industry sources said.

Still, manufactur­ers of semiconduc­tors shifted production to other industrial sectors with high growth rates such as consumer electronic­s which left clients in the car industry with less chips than needed, the sources said.

Automobilw­oche magazine reported that Volkswagen was in talks with alternativ­e suppliers of semiconduc­tors but there were concerns this could lead to higher prices.

Volkswagen wants to make sure that both Bosch and Continenta­l share the burden and partly compensate the company for the resulting additional costs, the magazine reported.

A Bosch spokeswoma­n said the company was currently focusing on maintainin­g supply chains as much as possible.

“We will discuss all further aspects of the shortage of semiconduc­tors directly with our customers and suppliers in due course,” she added. Continenta­l declined to comment.

German Economy Minister Peter Altmaier has urged his Taiwanese counterpar­t Wang Mei-hua to persuade Taiwanese chip manufactur­ers to help ease the semiconduc­tor shortage in the car industry which is hampering its fledgling economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Altmaier has asked Wang to address the issue in talks with Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co. Ltd., the world’s largest contract chipmaker and one of Germany’s main suppliers.

To reduce dependency on Asian suppliers and avoid similar problems in the future, Berlin is now planning to increase state support to increase the production capacity of semiconduc­tors in Germany and Europe.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A car body is moved in a production line at the Volkswagen plant in Wolfsburg, Germany on March 1, 2019.
REUTERS A car body is moved in a production line at the Volkswagen plant in Wolfsburg, Germany on March 1, 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada