The global shortage of
computer chips has had a significant impact on the car industry and is unlikely
to improve before the end of the year, according to Vauxhall Motors.
Vauxhall's managing director, Paul Wilcox, told the BBC that
the industry was facing a "problem" for the next two or three months.
However, he insisted there was no need for a major overhaul
of supply chains.
The UK has suffered a shortage of semiconductors for the past
year.
It was triggered by the Covid crisis. In the early stages of
the pandemic, there were dramatic cuts in the car and commercial vehicle
production. This was followed by a surge in output when the first wave of
lockdowns came to an end.
But as car factories tried to ramp up their output, they
found that the available supplies of semiconductors had already been snapped up
by other industries, notably the consumer electronics sector, which was
experiencing a boom in sales.
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Modern vehicles can have hundreds of chips on board. They are
used in engine controls, entertainment systems, safety mechanisms, instrument
clusters, and so on, so the shortage has forced manufacturers around the world
to curtail production.
Vauxhall is no exception. Production at both of its UK plants in
Ellesmere Port and Luton has been disrupted at different times. According to Mr
Wilcox, the effects are still being felt.
"It has obviously suppressed our ability to
manufacture," Mr Wilcox told the BBC, speaking at the Commercial Vehicle
Show in Birmingham many business listings.
Vauxhall
Motors' managing director Paul Wilcox says carmakers rely heavily on
"just-in-time" delivery systems
"If you look at the industry in the UK this
month, commercial vehicle sales, which have been hugely buoyant this year - 59%
up - this month they're 20% down, and obviously a large part of that is because
of supply shortages."
He added that parent company Stellates' decision to
invest £100m on building a new range of electric vans at Vauxhall's troubled
plant in Ellesmere Port was "massively important" for the factory and
its workforce.
Motor manufacturers rely heavily on so-called
"just-in-time" delivery systems - which mean that parts are delivered
to factories when they are needed, rather than being stockpiled.
This eliminates the need for expensive warehousing
but means that if parts do not appear when they are required, factories can
grind to a halt. But Mr Wilcox said he saw no need for a major overhaul of
supply chains as a result of the current crisis business listings.
"I don't think it exposes a problem," he
said. "I think it just illustrates that when you have a crisis, you can be
quite vulnerable."
He added that the car industry is very much
"based on lean manufacturing".
"I don't think that will change in the short to
medium term - may be one thing we need to be careful of is maintaining more
stability in terms of our contractual arrangements, but I don't see a
fundamental shift in the way we manage the business," he said.
Mr Wilcox also applauded the recent decision by
Vauxhall's parent company Stellates to build a new range of electric vans at
the company's plant at Ellesmere Port in Cheshire.
The factory, which employs 1000 people, had been at
risk of closure.
"It's obviously massively important," he
said. "The investment of £100m obviously gives surety of jobs, gives
stability in terms of the workforce and stability to the supply chain, which in
that part of the UK is obviously very important."
But the move, he said, would also protect the
long-term future of the plant, which will be building electric vehicles at a
time when the industry as a whole is moving rapidly towards electrification free business listings.
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