Apple Magazine

AUTO INDUSTRY BRACES FOR MORE CHIP SHORTAGES AFTER FIRE

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A fire at a plant owned by Japanese chipmaker Renesas could deepen the ongoing global semiconduc­tor shortage that has especially hampered automobile production.

The company, which makes chips for Toyota, Nissan and Honda, expects production at one of the buildings at its Naka Factory in Hitachinak­a to be halted for a month. Shares in all three automakers fell this week.

Tokyo-based Renesas said the fire started when some equipment overheated and ignited, though it wasn’t known what caused it to overheat. There were no casualties or damage to the building.

Renesas said two-thirds of the products made in the building could be produced elsewhere, although “due to the recent increase in demand for semiconduc­tors, the situation does not allow for all products to be immediatel­y produced alternativ­ely.”

Separately last week, Nissan said it was temporaril­y shutting down production at factories in Smyrna, Tennessee; Canton, Mississipp­i; and in Aguascalie­ntes, Mexico, due to the chip shortage.

Volkswagen and Fiat Chrysler (now Stellantis) also say they have been affected by the shortage and forced to delay production of some models in order to keep other factories running.

The chip shortage, combined with a February winter storm, also recently forced Ford to build F-150 pickup trucks without some computers. The company said the pickups would be held at factories for “a number of weeks,” then shipped to dealers once computers are available and quality checks are done.

Industry officials say semiconduc­tor companies diverted production to consumer electronic­s during the worst of the COVID-19 slowdown in auto sales last spring. Global automakers were forced to close plants to prevent the spread of the virus. When automakers recovered, there weren’t enough chips as demand for personal electronic­s boomed.

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Image: Nicolas Asfouri
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