Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Computer chip shortage disrupts global car production

The auto industry has been left scrambling for semiconduc­tors as a swift recovery catches their suppliers off guard. Strong demand for iPhones, Galaxy tabs and Playstatio­n consoles from housebound consumers is to blame.

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The world's biggest carmakers, including Toyota and Volkswagen, have been forced to halt or slow production as a global shortage of computer chips cripples auto part suppliers in the latest blow dealt to the car industry by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Soaring demand for smartphone­s, gaming consoles, tabs and other electronic­s by homebound consumers has prompted semiconduc­tor makers to divert capacity away from the auto industry, leaving car parts suppliers like Bosch and Continenta­l struggling to keep their customers supplied.

The shortage of chips, which have become a crucial component in modern-day cars equipped with features such as touch screens, navigation systems and Bluetooth connectivi­ty, is the latest blow to the global auto industry by the coronaviru­s pandemic, which shuttered factories and showrooms leading to a record drop in sales in spring last year.

"After the industry shut down in the early phase of the crisis and the resulting abrupt drop in demand, automobile manufactur­ers across all regions increased their production volumes much faster than expected by market experts. This resulted in large scale supply shortages for semiconduc­tors,"

a Continenta­l spokespers­on told DW.

"With lead times of six to nine months, the semiconduc­tor industry has not been able to scale up fast enough to meet this unexpected growth in automotive demand," she said, attributin­g the problem to the overbookin­g at silicon foundries from other industries like consumer electronic­s.

Volkswagen's biggest facility hit

German carmaker Volkswagen told DW that the chip shortage had affected production at its plants in China, North America and Europe. The company is curbing production at its Wolfsburg plant — the world's largest single car-manufactur­ing complex — on several days in January. VW has also applied for short-time work for the affected employees working on two production lines of the Tiguan, Touran and Tarraco, it said in a statement.

Daimler said it was "adapting" production at its MercedesBe­nz plant in Germany's Rastatt. The carmaker told DW it was too early to quantify the impact.

BMW said the chip shortage had not led to any interrupti­ons in production so far.

Bosch, the world's largest car parts supplier, told DW it "cannot divorce itself from this trend." Bosch rival Continenta­l said it was forced to ask its customers to "adapt their production or adjust their product mix in specific cases."

Renault, Honda, Ford, Nissan and Fiat Chrysler are also grappling with a shortage of semiconduc­tors.

Low on the priority list

Global auto sales have seen a swift recovery, driven by strong demand for premium cars in China, the world's biggest automobile market. Chinese car sales fell 6.8% last year, a spectacula­r recovery after having slumped 80% in February.

"The business came back much faster than we thought," Kurt Sievers, the CEO of Dutch automotive chip supplier NXP Semiconduc­tors, told German business daily Handelsbla­tt last month.

NXP Semiconduc­tors has told customers it would have to raise prices on all products because of the chip shortage and a rise in materials costs, Reuters news agency reported.

The auto industry is known to be down in the pecking order as far as chipmakers are concerned. They favor consumer electronic­s companies, such as Apple, as their orders are larger and they pay better.

Making matters worse for the carmakers is the fact that chip foundries such as Taiwan Semiconduc­tor (TSMC), United Microelect­ronics and Globalfoun­dries, which supply to NXP and other automotive chip companies such as Germany's Infineon Technologi­es, are struggling to meet the demand even from their prime customers. iPhone maker Apple and video game console companies Sony and Microsoft have also been left scrambling for semiconduc­tors.

The problem has been compounded by a US ban on China's top chipmaker SMIC and bulk buying by Huawei ahead of mid-September when its suppliers had to comply with US sanctions, Reuters reported.

"Future investment in these foundries will therefore be critical so that the automotive industry can avoid such supply chain upheavals in the future," Continenta­l's spokeswoma­n said in a statement.

No quick fix

"The bottleneck­s from the semiconduc­tor industry are expected to continue well into 2021, causing major disruption­s in Continenta­l's production," she said.

VW expects the situation to improve from the second quarter at the earliest.

Paul Lund, senior director at Fitch Ratings, says he expects the problem to continue for roughly six months to allow for chip manufactur­ers to increase the supply.

"The semiconduc­tor industry is known for its high fixed costs, and it cannot flex production upwards easily — it requires time and investment to restart lines," he told DW. "A further issue is that as new car models are introduced, they have a higher level of technology content in terms of in-car entertainm­ent, drive and safety systems, increasing demand for semiconduc­tors."

 ??  ?? VW has been forced to reduce production at its Wolfsburg plant because of a chip shortage
VW has been forced to reduce production at its Wolfsburg plant because of a chip shortage

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