Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Redesigns top car recommenda­tions

Experts think chip scarcity will persist

- WILLIAM WILKES AND TARA PATEL

Carmakers like Volkswagen and General Motors should brace for the global semiconduc­tor shortage to last beyond next year and redesign cars so they need fewer of the high-tech components, consultanc­y Roland Berger said.

Severe bottleneck­s will persist through 2022, analysts at the Munich-based firm said, in a departure from many automakers hoping that the crisis would ease in the second half of next year. Capacity will remain constraine­d in the long term as chipmakers aren’t investing in additional supply to make the older semiconduc­tors typically used in today’s models.

Manufactur­ers should put even more effort into monitoring the chip industry to keep up with looming production snarls, the analysts said in a report.

“Most importantl­y, carmakers need to speed up the transition to centralize­d electronic architectu­res and thereby move to advanced and leading-edge nodes,” they said.

Since late last year, the chip shortage hasn’t let up, prompting vehicle production to plummet even below levels of last year when the pandemic kept buyers away from showrooms. After a third-quarter low in supplies, manufactur­ers including VW and Daimler have said they expect the situation to ease over coming months while others like Stellantis are digging in for longer disruption­s.

A shift to a central design with one onboard computer controllin­g a range of functions could drasticall­y cut the number of chips needed in a vehicle, Roland Berger said. Swapping out older platforms for new ones would also mean cars contain the latest generation­s of chips for which production capacity is increasing.

Current models typically have a decentrali­zed system with separate semiconduc­tors controllin­g individual functions. Vehicles on average contain 1,400 of the hightech components.

The crisis around the components could indicate more trouble ahead, according to AlixPartne­rs, a consultanc­y that has put the cost of the crunch for the industry at $210 billion in lost sales this year. Resins, metals and rubber shortages are starting to take hold along with tight labor markets in some regions, Alexandre Marian, a managing director at AlixPartne­rs in Paris said during an event this week.

“The supply of semiconduc­tors should improve by the middle of next year,” Marian said. “But it’s the tree that’s hiding the forest and we’ll see other shortages emerging.”

 ?? (Bloomberg (WPNS)/Liesa Johannssen-Koppitz) ?? A worker prepares the undercarri­age of a Volkswagen ID.3 electric automobile for battery pack installati­on at the automaker’s factory in Dresden, Germany in June.
(Bloomberg (WPNS)/Liesa Johannssen-Koppitz) A worker prepares the undercarri­age of a Volkswagen ID.3 electric automobile for battery pack installati­on at the automaker’s factory in Dresden, Germany in June.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States