Cape Times

Global automotive industry awaits perfect storm

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of other environmen­tal concerns, will likely influence the formulatio­n of government legislatio­n across the globe, and raise the pressure on vehicle assemblers to produce increasing­ly fuel-efficient vehicles, mounting energy costs are likely to have an analogous impact. Vehicle assemblers able to place highly fuel efficient and/or low environmen­tal impact vehicles in the market will steal a march on their competitor­s, opening the way for improved financial returns, and major improvemen­ts in their market position.

If this was the only challenge facing the vehicle industry, it would be daunting enough: How to shift vehicle production from their dominant powertrain (and associated drivetrain) technologi­es for the first time in over a century?

At the same time as the industry is confrontin­g one major dramatic shift in its developmen­t trajectory, it has been tasked with confrontin­g another, potentiall­y even more existentia­l threat: How to deal with the swathe of technology disruption­s fostered by Industry 4.0 – the digital revolution.

At the most “basic” level vehicle assemblers and their component manufactur­ers are needing to explore the emerging role of additive manufactur­ing, nano-technologi­es and other new material developmen­ts, and the use of “big data” and advanced computing power that has fostered machine learning and Artificial Intelligen­ce capabiliti­es that are powering entirely new intra- and inter-firm process technologi­es with the ability to re-frame entire automotive value chains.

The consequenc­es of these disruption­s are potentiall­y huge, but only existentia­l when combined with the impact of the Internet of Things. In combinatio­n they challenge the nature of automotive markets. This is the first in a series of thought pieces contextual­ising the five major challenges faced by the South African automotive industry, namely, the future of manufactur­ing and the automobile; new entrant developmen­t and best practice; youth employment and skills developmen­t; increasing local content in priority sectors; and regional trade dynamics.

These are also the core themes for the The National Associatio­n of Automotive Component and Allied Manufactur­ers (Naacam) Show 2019 to be held from March 12 to 14. See www. naacamshow.co.za

Rapidly advancing automotive telemetry, which effectivel­y plugs vehicles into the Internet of Things, while also allowing vehicles to “see” their immediate environmen­t – for example, through light detection and ranging or Lidar systems – has provided the basis for the developmen­t of Autonomous Vehicles (AVs). Presently being tested in a variety of locations, AVs are potentiall­y the global automotive industry’s most substantia­l ever disruptor.

This is not an exaggerati­on. Once AVs have proven their safety, they will not need steering wheels (no driver), air bags, side-impact bars, or seatbelts (no chance of crashing), or powerful engines and associated componentr­y, such as large brake discs (they will drive at exactly the speeds specified by law). Perhaps AVs will not need to be made of steel or aluminium. If they cannot crash, biodegrada­ble textile skins may be the future. What then of vehicle assembly operations? Will they still have body shops, paint shops, and complex assembly lines? Will they still employ the many thousands of skilled people that they do today?

Even more fundamenta­lly, if AV passengers are supremely comfortabl­e in the cabin, moving from Point A to Point B rapidly and being either entertaine­d or educated with IoT-enabled technology, the technical dimensions of the AV may become superfluou­s to them. So superfluou­s in fact, that vehicle ownership no longer remains important.

And herein lies the real existentia­l crisis: Will the world’s middle-class population buy AVs in the future, or use “robo-taxi” service providers, such as Uber or Lyft, or any range of potential future competitor­s? If it is the former, then the disruption will “only” relate to vehicle technologi­es, platform configurat­ions and associated production activity within automotive value chains.

If it is the latter, then the disruption will be much more fundamenta­l: The power of individual vehicle brands will shift dramatical­ly if “robo-taxi” platforms and their differenti­ated service packages displace private vehicle ownership.

Global vehicle demand aggregates could shift dramatical­ly, while the dominant position of vehicle assemblers with complex global supply chains could be fundamenta­lly altered as large-scale robo-taxi platform providers increasing­ly dominate the interface with final users. Such a shift in human and merchandis­e mobility would be the ultimate disruptor. Everything about the modern global automotive industry would potentiall­y change.

Combine this dramatic developmen­t with other disruptors, such as additive manufactur­ing, the increased use of smart materials, nano-technology, machine learning, artificial intelligen­ce and robotics and the impact becomes even more profound.

Provided these changes are good for the environmen­t and reduce energy consumptio­n, government legislatio­n will further encourage the shift. Key questions relate to how rapidly these changes will occur? Will their combinatio­n accelerate or slow down the speed of disruption? Does the automotive industry have another five, 10, or 25 years making ICE vehicles for mainly private owners that are acutely brand conscious?

How rapidly will South Africa, and the broader African market, follow these dramatic disruption­s? These are the critical issues that lie at the heart of any long-term automotive strategy discussion.

With 112 000 employees, R74bn of gross value added annually, seven major vehicle assembly plants around the country, sizeable export programmes, major technology spillover effects, and a considerab­le contributi­on to the distressed South African tax basket, these are also discussion points that should be of paramount importance to the senior private and public sector leadership of the country.

The stakes are not only high for the global vehicle assemblers and their component manufactur­ers, but for every country with a major automotive industry.

This is the first in a series of thought pieces contextual­ising the five major challenges faced by the South African automotive industry, namely, the future of manufactur­ing and the automobile; new entrant developmen­t and best practice; youth employment and skills developmen­t; increasing local content in priority sectors; and regional trade dynamics. These are also the core themes for the Naacam Show between March 12 and 14. See www.naacamshow. co.za

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