Bangkok Post

Hyundai wants to develop own chips

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SAN FRANCISCO: Hyundai Motor Co’s global chief operating officer said on Wednesday that the South Korean automaker wanted to develop its own chips to reduce reliance on chipmakers.

A global shortage of semiconduc­tors, triggered partly by surging demand for laptops and other electronic products during the pandemic, has shuttered some auto production lines globally this year.

Hyundai temporaril­y suspended some factories, but the company’s global COO Jose Munoz told reporters the worst has passed for the industry chip shortage, adding Hyundai had the “toughest months” in August and September.

“The (chip) industry is reacting very, very fast,” Munoz said, adding Intel Corp “is investing a lot of money to expand capacity.

“But also in our case, we want to be able to develop our own chips within the group, so we are a little bit less dependent in a potential situation like this.

“This takes a lot of investment and time, but this is something we’re working on,” he said.

Munoz said the company’s parts affiliate Hyundai Mobis would play a key role in the in-house developmen­t plan.

He also said Hyundai Motor aimed to deliver vehicles at the level of its original business plan in the fourth quarter, and offset some of its production losses next year.

Along with Toyota Motor Corp and Tesla Inc, Hyundai is among a handful of automakers which increased global sales despite the chip shortage.

Hyundai decided not to cut orders during the pandemic, after seeing the Asian markets recover more strongly than expected, Munoz said.

Munoz, president of Hyundai Motor North America, said the company was on track to produce electric cars in the United States in 2022, and was looking into both enhancing its existing factory in Alabama and increasing its production capacity.

He said the US government needed to extend a proposed $4,500 tax credit incentive to US electric vehicles made at non-union factories as well as union ones.

“American workers are the same,” Munoz said. “We would like this to be equal for all.”

US factories of Tesla and foreign automakers such as Hyundai and Toyota are not unionised.

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