Nearly recovered from blaze, auto industry chipmaker says

Ford pickup trucks built lacking computer chips are shown in parking lot storage in Dearborn, Mich., Tuesday, May 4, 2021. Automakers are cutting production as they grapple with a global shortage of computer chips, and that's making dealers nervous. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)
Ford pickup trucks built lacking computer chips are shown in parking lot storage in Dearborn, Mich., Tuesday, May 4, 2021. Automakers are cutting production as they grapple with a global shortage of computer chips, and that's making dealers nervous. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

DETROIT -- A fire-damaged Japanese factory that supplies many of the auto industry's computer chips is producing about 88% of what it was making before the March blaze, its owner says.

Renesas Electronics Corp. announced last week that replacements for fire-damaged equipment arrived on May 27 and should be running in mid-June. That would allow the company to return to full production.

The March 19 Renesas fire and a worldwide shortage of computer chips have wreaked havoc on auto industry production schedules, forcing companies to cut production and allocate scarce chips to higher-margin models.

The production cuts have crimped the supply of new vehicles just as demand recovers from the coronavirus pandemic, causing shortages and raising new vehicle prices. Used vehicle prices have hit record levels.

Ford, for instance, said the shortage would halve its production from normal levels in the second quarter. Nearly all automakers have been affected but Ford, General Motors, Nissan, Honda, Stellantis, Tesla and Volkswagen have been hit.

While near-normal production at the Renesas Naka plant is good news for the auto business, it won't solve the industry's shortage by itself, said Phil Amsrud, senior principal analyst with IHS Markit who tracks automotive semiconductors.

Renesas is the third-largest maker of automotive chips by revenue and the largest supplier of microcontroller units, which are widely used on automobiles, Amsrud said. But it contracts for a majority of auto chip production from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which is still working to increase output, he said.

"Naka by itself is not going to be able to fill the entire hole that we have in the supply chain," Amsrud said.

It will take until the third quarter for the auto industry to see the improved output from TSMC and other chip foundries, but it won't be enough to fill a backlog, he said. Even from October through December, he said the auto industry still won't have enough chips.

"We should start seeing an improvement, but we won't be able to ship everything we didn't fill earlier," Amsrud said.

There are as many as 80 different computers in more sophisticated models that control everything from touch screens to transmissions to partially automated driver safety features.

Automakers closed factories for about two months at the start of the pandemic last year to help stop it from spreading. But they came back faster than expected, and by then, chipmakers had switched production to booming consumer electronics.

Then the Renesas fire hit. The shortage is forcing the auto industry to rethink its supply chains and perhaps scrap some just-in-time parts deliveries.

Upcoming Events