Chip shortage casts shadow over China's auto industry
recovery
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[April 19, 2021] By
Norihiko Shirouzu and Yilei Sun
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -A global shortage of
semiconductors is hitting autos production in China, jeopardising hopes
the world's biggest car market might spearhead a recovery in the sector,
industry executives warn.
Automakers around the world have had to adjust assembly lines due to the
shortages, caused by manufacturing delays that some semiconductor makers
blame on a faster-than expected recovery from the coronavirus pandemic.
Volkswagen AG, China's biggest foreign automaker which hopes to sell
over four million vehicles in the country, said the situation had not
improved in the second quarter.
The German group's China chief, Stephan Woellenstein, told reporters on
Sunday it was hard to gauge how much production Volkswagen might lose
week to week, or even month to month because of the chip shortage.
"It's really like fire-fighting ... In some cases, we have switched to
another chip so we changed suppliers," he said, ahead of the Shanghai
auto show which opens on Monday.
"It is like a perfect storm," BMW's China chief Jochen Goller said at
Shanghai show, adding the shortage had put pressure on BMW's purchasing.
However, he said BMW had not lost production due to the issue, as it
made early orders of chips.
William Li, chief executive of Nio Inc, told Reuters on Monday he
expected a "relatively big impact" from the chip shortage on its
electric vehicle production in the second quarter.
China, where over 25 million vehicles were sold last year, has been a
ray of hope for automakers, including Volkswagen and General Motors,
after the global industry was hit hard by the pandemic.
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A Volkswagen ID.6 X is displayed ahead of the Shanghai Auto Show, in
Shanghai, China April 18, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song
But China is also where news of the chip shortage first emerged last year. The
problem was worsened by a fire in Renesas Electronics' chip factory in Japan in
March.
In 2019, automotive groups accounted for roughly a tenth of the $429 billion
semiconductor market, according to McKinsey, with NXP Semiconductor, Germany's
Infineon and Renesas among key suppliers to the sector.
Automakers, including Nissan Motor, Ford Motor and Nio have said they have cut
production due to the chip shortage.
Li Shaohua, a senior official at the China Association of Automobile
Manufacturers, said the chip supply shortage hit Chinese auto production by 5%
to 8% in the first two months of this year. It expects the impact to ease from
the third quarter.
As a result, the China Automobile Dealers Association said it expects car
inventories to continue to drop in China, and that supplies of some models might
not be able to meet demand.
(Reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu and Yilei SunEditing by Alexandra Hudson and
Mark Potter)
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