The Mercury News

Global chip crisis forces Ford to halt work at German plant

- By Charles Riley and Hanna Ziady

Ford has ordered a monthlong production halt at one of its plants in Germany, the latest sign that a global shortage of computer chips is putting carmakers under increasing pressure and threatenin­g their recovery from the pandemic.

The US automaker said it would idle its factory in Saarlouis, Germany, from Monday until February 19 because of the chip shortage and weak demand. The plant makes Ford’s most popular car in Europe, the Focus, and employs around 5,000 workers.

“We are closely monitoring the situation and adjusting production schedules to minimize the effect on our employees, suppliers, customers and dealers across Europe,” said a Ford spokesman. “At this time, we do not anticipate any similar actions at our other European facilities.”

Ford was forced to close a SUV plant in Louisville, Kentucky, last week because of the shortage of semiconduc­tors. But the shutdown in Germany suggests the problem, which is affecting carmakers around the world, could get worse before it gets better.

Leading semiconduc­tor manufactur­ers reassigned capacity from automakers last year after the pandemic slashed car sales, instead shipping chips to companies that produce smartphone­s, gaming systems and other tech gadgets that remained in high demand. Supplies are still tight, and carmakers are struggling to secure the chips they need.

Volkswagen, Fiat Chrysler, Toyota, Nissan and Honda are among the other automakers suffering from the shortage of chips, which

are used in a growing number of applicatio­ns including driver assistance systems and navigation control. The average car has between 50 to 150 chips.

“Light vehicle manufactur­ers are finding increased disruption to the supply of systems using semiconduc­tors in the first quarter,” Mark Fulthorpe, executive director for the automotive team at IHS Markit, said recently in a research note. “The situation is highly fluid.”

The disruption comes at a crucial time for carmakers, which suffered a collapse in sales in the early months of the pandemic, yet remain under intense pressure from global regulators to invest heavily in electric cars. Research firm Bernstein estimates global vehicle sales will grow 9% in 2021, following an expected 15% decline last year — but the chip shortage is putting the recovery at risk.

Volkswagen said in a statement last month that it will need to adjust production at plants in China, North America and Europe this quarter. The changes will affect production of the bestsellin­g VW Golf, as well as models from its Audi, Skoda and Seat brands.

According to UBS analysts, the world’s largest carmaker could lose out on production of 100,000 units in the first three months of the year, or roughly 4% of global quarterly output, as a result of the components shortages.

“We are doing everything in our power to minimize lost production and to ensure that normal deliveries to customers can be resumed as rapidly as possible,” Volkswagen Group purchasing manager Murat Aksel said in a statement last month.

Audi said Monday that it has furloughed 10,000 workers because of the chip shortage, with production and shift patterns affected at plants in Germany and

Mexico. Production of the luxury brand’s A4 sedan and A5 cabriolet has been provisiona­lly halted in Neckarsulm, Germany, through January 29.

“We are currently looking at a range of countermea­sures and alternativ­es designed to mitigate the impact of the supply bottleneck and, in turn, minimize the number of vehicles affected,” a spokespers­on said. “Any improvemen­t largely depends on the semiconduc­tor industry.”

In an interview published on Sunday by the Financial Times, CEO Markus Duesmann said Audi would try to limit production losses to 10,000 cars during the first quarter.

 ?? KRISZTIAN BOCSI — GETTY IMAGES ?? Workers fit Focus chassis inside the Ford factory in Saarlouis, Germany, in 2019. The factory will close for a month.
KRISZTIAN BOCSI — GETTY IMAGES Workers fit Focus chassis inside the Ford factory in Saarlouis, Germany, in 2019. The factory will close for a month.

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