Bangkok Post

Toyota wants to rev up production

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TOKYO/NAGOYA: Toyota Motor Corp in December wants to restart production curtailed by component shortages with a rebound in shipments from pandemic-hit suppliers that may help it claw back around a third of output lost to supply disruption­s, according to three sources familiar with the carmaker’s plans.

Toyota last month cut its production target for the financial year to end-March by 300,000 vehicles to nine million units because rising Covid-19 infections slowed work at parts factories in Malaysia and Vietnam, compoundin­g a global chip shortage that has forced it and other big automakers to curtail output.

“The Japanese carmaker has asked suppliers to make up for lost production so it can build an additional 97,000 vehicles between December and the end of March, with some considerin­g additional weekend shifts to do so,’’ said the sources, who asked not to be identified because they are not authorised to talk to the media.

“Nothing has yet been decided about production plans beyond November,” a Toyota spokespers­on said.

“Covid infection rates in Southeast Asia are dropping dramatical­ly and people’s concerns about production risk are easing,” said Takashi Miyao, a researcher at automotive industry consultant Carnorama.

“It looks like the industry is emerging from a tunnel,” he added.

Toyota, which had hardened its supply chain against disruption­s after the 2011 earthquake that devastated Japan’s northeast coast, was the last of the major automakers to revise down production plans because of parts shortages.

The pandemic forced component factories to close while also driving up demand for semiconduc­tors that carmakers needed as people forced to stay home bought tablets and other electronic devices.

With too few parts, automakers have been unable to take advantage of a rebound in demand for cars in key markets such as China.

Vehicle sales there in September dipped by a fifth from a year earlier.

In a separate developmen­t, Toyota said yesterday that it would aim to equip its cars with highly efficient solar power generation systems as the automaker ramps up its efforts to achieve carbon neutrality.

Toyota will carry out research and developmen­t with the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, which has expertise in renewable energy production, and Toyota Central R&D Labs Inc, a group firm of the automaker that is focused on achieving technologi­cal advances.

“The three parties will seek to popularise vehicles equipped with solar power generation systems ... To this end, (we) will pursue improvemen­ts in conversion efficiency and reductions in cost for both solar batteries and solar power generation systems,” Toyota said in a press release, without giving details about the in-vehicle systems.

Based on data collected by the national institute, Toyota seeks to improve the conversion efficiency of solar power generation systems and batteries and bring down costs to allow for wider adoption.

To achieve its goal of reducing carbon dioxide emissions to net zero by 2050, Toyota will also step up the developmen­t of technology to produce and transport near emission-free hydrogen at lower costs.

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